Try
[Safety
joposed
T Hifcty comniittee,
red by community
to make'TaShij
^oUB- havfl. teen
«Ed.Haffoy,_B^to.
UiUh tbotit 40 penons
^atstniins vttTlouJ or-
f^iliirtriea Rnd
~i3<I»tlu H ooionB.thB
il Safety council
^ Ihe roto at In-
i leddenta rIw.Ib
Skating Kiiia and Queen Ciowned
mitut'on K ttaUwIda
Hrftttnre-to ft«t up U)B
^ will. Include ftcd-
MOltllklii^ 1)ul win
1 trUIIc ulety,
,1 crjiolrtUoM were
Id ttiD formnUon of
iilety conunltleea
■itxil innipr. The com-
•^ffiw the thetnfc Ui«t
noUoa li theV""'
Esuiaul Solety coun'
«th»t Idiho children
ff'diiii<:s""or rcncIiliiB
js tto« ot neatly My
t3lh« union becnUM Of
1 tcddcntnl duUi
Lot-ths^tACaJiinjUt-
ment In the cam.
d by iti conunli'
|to Seek
s to End
-Rows
with 800 Bpoctntor.1 crowded Into
the hall and several hundred more
turned away, tn embers
Rhythm Roller Slutte club ataged
the flret of two "aknte roUlei" Mon-
day night and raised »071,(IO for the
Mnrch of Dimes.
Tn-o Boy ScouU, both vletlma ol
jP°JIl^^--ftD_ttia.WiM_la_rccQvory.
^States soon will call
tt nttotlatleng to end
' Jtt-Scnitiaa
icuo] nne, It
kVublnston.
1 Bittaln hopes
cnt tor adequate
sex eanal lont
«t.-EByptlnp asplrn:
a Uaie he sftld the
eiaient will be held
pkuot life and prop-
.Cairo rioting.
■blpUui ortlclnli an-
Tttw-curfewi'ylohtora
T**«iijuieu uy puiiiar
PiUiht while nccurtty
p roand- the -c lock con-
t? onler In the cou n;
■ Wlo were round in
IUk British Turf club
7™ hotel today, hlfih
J« Old, hrlnalng to at
I loUl dead In Satur-
■iDdJmrnlna-Uy-mobs.-
•pokesman (or the
M MttloiudeleBnHon.
fniiThe eflorta to
Jlw-Esyptlnn conflict
I jf come (com tKo
'« uld the lines o(
1 "muit be lc(t to
B CTIOBEN
"Jf. Jan. 10 on
«M wos nominated
I ^Kit _TriimBn ~ to -ix
ila., succeed^
faysLeft
I IS.DOO- puMcnRcr
M In Ts'ln Pftiu
/ sbout B.OOO ear
P purchased IDS3 tabs
■ noon, -
»"*ho do not pur-
5 P- m. Thura-
"■'"'"fc-crn.'iKTarr
■»M are piirchaseff.
L ftf.P* dlsplnycd on
VolnHteer's Aiito
Hit, Driver Fined
A TwIn rails drlrer was lined t35 for nesllgent drlvlnit after his ear
was Involved In an accident wltli the auto ol a Tratflc Safety Volunteer
and two men appeared in Rupert courta on charaea ol drunken drlvinc In
the latest action for Mado Talley*s trafllo safety eanpalsn.
Donald NcIion,.eM Hanlson atreet. pleaded gnillty In Twin palls jaitlce
lurt Tuesdoy momlcs to nesllsent driving. Ho was fined $33 and t3
lata and tiia drlver'a ttceoav waa nusnended ita 30 dayt. Kelson's auVo
collided ulUi the car of the R«v.' Herman O. Rice. qSQ Shoshono street east,'
at Sixth avenue and Third etreet north-ahortly-bctoro noon MQnilay.'''niB
Hey. Mr. Blco dUplaya a Trairic Safety-Volunteer sUcker on his nuto,
ThB. front ef Kelson's 1B50 ?Ord aedan and the right aide ol the Rev. Mr.
lUce'a IBW Ford icdan wero daaaiied. _ _ ■
- Two Rupert men, both faced with drunken drlvlnff charges, fared dlf-
fercntly-ln Rupert couita TUesdRV momlnit, One man, because ho was
charsed with drunken driving for n second time, was bound ovciLta. dls-
trlot court on a felony-totmt ■ " . '
" Thomaa-ILStiker, Rupert,~Wa3 Txiund over to dislrlet court by'Probate
Judge Jake Wall. Judgo-wall sald-Sialter had been convicted of dninkcn
driving In Rupert back In 1041. Stnker waived preliminary hearing when
armlgned before Judge Wall Tuesday and posted the 11,000 boll rcaulred
Finale .ot-the-nhythm Roller Skating cfub"i-pollo'beMfri party Monday nliht was tiiB crowning ef the king
and qtieen.-Left to right are Avery noyd, polio victim: Claude Ilardwcll. king: Linda Paige, qaeeo, aod Don
_Borcheri.poIlo_»Jctlm — (Staff-photo -1
iiravlni)
Hundreds Turned Away as Roller Skate
Club" Pfesents^'ToUies" Show in T. F.
Borchcrs, explorer Scout, and A very
Floyd, 'nsslatant Scoutmaster of
troop GO sponsored by the Presby-
terian' church. The allow" "will be
staged ajtoln nt 8 p. m. today.
With Joe Olbney aa master of
tlirau{!li tliclr pnces io tlio delight
of tlie crowd. Bursts of applause
greeted alt of tlie 13 acts. Inter-
mission entertainment was (umlsli-
cd bi' pupils of the Merle Etoddord
dancing school.
Kcnnetli McNcw, manager of the
Rliytlim roller rink, gave full credit
and. Its (aclUtles, as well as the
skates, (or the polio benefit.
At conclusion of the -program
Claude Hardwcll and I4nda PalsD
were croinied Idlifr and queen by
the two Soy Scouts. Mrs. John K.
to-
In the show.
•They worked hard and the pub-
lic's acceptance Is better than their
wildcat cx|Mctntlons^Tlio.bDya ftnd
girls are nil ready to put on an
even better performance Tuesday
DlRhL"
Mptlew donated usa o( tba .hall
change
,N(eede(i_to_SaYeJI._S.
A change it; tidminiatratioh is the only chance o£ stiving
tjiia nation from collapse, wnrn,cd Ezra Whitlni Cocur
d'Alene, lonfftime Republican leader and national committee
vice chairman, after aakinfir ^o\v an administration based on
•PondcrgntrtrTnTnciTilfltrcoaldjfaatancfl^fl-biidgBtT^^
Whitla was the principal speaker Monday afternoon at a
mcotinff of the Women's Republican club of Twin Falls coun-
The grant had been public knowl-
edge bclore the recent visit of Prime
, . -. . , . Mlnlflter Winston ClmrchllL It waa
ty, Thp Pliih rpplprtpri ift nffii-frg nnri lioanLjmrinMaJinmmit- -the-f l r st -B b eBbltrtconPmlo-B]d~ta"
Russ Blamed
InM-Vote
^__RIS, Ja n. 20 rtF^— The I mpor-
"lan r~poli ticnl comml ttce of Ui e
United Notions found Soviet Russia'
guilty today o( vlolatluR lls lrlcnd-
slilp treaty with national 1st China
Ijy Its aggressive policie s In" cast
^lor ^
tjiticr . ituEjiinn~opi»siiIair
the political committee approved by
a vote of 34 to 0. with 25 countries
nbalalnlng, -a- chlnm-nallonnllflt'
-rasolu tlon-aecnalngHhe-eoTlet-tmion-
ol ..violating their Jrlendihlp- treaty
OriD45. ^ *■
It Vp-os the biggest victory Gener-
alissimo Chiang KnI-shek's regime
has ever scored over the com-
munLila Jn Uio U.N.
Four countries voted with the
Soviet bloc against Uie Chinese
olutlon—ln'dia, Indonesia, Israel
Burma, India haa led n fight
to oust the natlonnllsts from U.N.
mtmbstsblp . an d -r oooBnlao-.Vh o-rodB.-
MOTION CONSIDERED
Boise, Jan. 20 <;f}— DUtrlct Judge
-Kales-Lowo-hna-mitl er- n drisemcnt-
a motion for n, directed verdlcl^f
acquittal In the perjury trial ol ex-
■^Inekfoot-Mn yur r r iuil Si i i lttt
Ho said the olhet debt-free state's
constitution prohibits going Into
■LzBmiUiLUffrp'''1 snulhtm ■ Tdahn'
.oll.taportant-water rlBhia-may-bo-
come even niorc Important, envis-
ioning u.ie d(. atomic polffr to make
It feaalblfl;lo get water- where It- ts
necdedr Ho advised hanging on U
water rights pending IiirUicr scien'
tlflc dcvcIopmenLi, ^
Emphaaliei State's' High ta
"We want the right to use oui
water and develop our power and
use them where we want tliem," he
Enld_ lu_cmBUaaltlna ■'atot«'fl..rlRUtf
should not be turned over to bu-
reaucracies.
Turning to the national situation,
^ etoPu i% Aiiaii31 ine-
§S?sponsiBle for Mishap
?-f^'ate Mine In.
: ^ 'McDoii'ell, iricr
u'.^'MUiraUon'Mon'
ke William .E.
«»>llfl Mil should
^* to BQHfv (1..
' Punry (he
'.■otk.
*» a result ot
Morton al.wa-,.
McDowell said- he. will make
recommendation to the mining
company to put-lagglnga (planking)
In the man -way comjinrtments to
pr e ^ eiif wuik c ia irWii 'fg lllin rnnt o
ttie- Umber -aUdea. Be- said" Morton
managed to get to 'the lO-foot oti-
set but Dnvls (ell past him (or fll
leeL Olfsets should be (Ixed'ao (
Hon- cannotr-f ainnore- than" JOTect,
McDowell added.
McDowell said the (oUllty at the
Triumph mine la Uie first mlnlnn
death In Idaho this year. Ho added
that Davla' death also Is the drat
at the Triumph mine aince he be-
came state mine liispector In 1B*0.
In IPSO, he conUnued, Uicre.were
10 p^ln^na lalalltles In the slate.
Last year there were only five. Most
m.lne dentlia resulted (rom folllns"
rocks, ho explained. Men (ailing
down shafts Is second on the- list,
"ig-Jinlfl. niid Injurli '
TioulBso n-aj-a 'aro third,
tee reports.
Before turninB: to national
issues, Whitla - praised Gov.
Lcn B. Jordan for^his efforts
-to-protect-Idaho watfi ' Ti ghts;
He clted-fcderal usurpation oE pri-
-vato -wntcr-rlBbts-to-tbo-S»crameo to-
ri ver In California.
_ Unique Toil U I
He also pointed out Idahoans can
be- proud Uiclr state Is one of only
1W[>"((talts"in tho nation to be debt-
Gamhler Tndkted.
' WAaHINOTOH. Jan. 30 U1 —
Attomey-Oeneral McOroth an-
nounced today a (edcral Income tax
Indlctm ent-itgnlnst-Samo el-ItBeatd;
.Waahington dc3crllitd_tiE-U.-S.
n(t|ciais OS ono_o(_th6jnn!rst.Kamb-
llng opcralbra on the AUonlle sca-
The IndlclmcnU MeOrath said;
was returned by a federal grand Jury
In BalUmore. It was filed before
wtiiinm n Coleman
— StillJanuary"
"Now you knew that sudden
'apnlfc' couldn't .last." sold the
wealllerman;' "But take heart,
this forecast hInLj .of better
things to come."
The AP reporter didn't see 10
'much to cheer about as he read
this prediction for the next five
"Tcmpemtures averaging near
normal, with a (tw snow (lurries
near the end of tlio week. Highs'
-about 3S, lows about 33."
(Probably).
Prior to the- skate show, Mrs.
Balsch presided at a final organiza-
tion meeting, .al-the Legion.- hall
for the mothers march on polio
which la set (or 1 p. m. 'niumdoy.
A mother will call on every bouse
(CtaUninJ ^ rn I. CtllBi
$300,000,000
"^M^o^Britisli
^ WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (U.O
The United Sltncs hos gronled Brit-
ain #300,000,000 te maintain the
"atrength and BtaWUty" o( her de.
the British since Marshall pla;i help
to Br,ltnln ended.
M ui uitl— Sod urlly— Director
Averetl Harrlmnn announced the
grant last night, lie stressed that
1 1- will - no t- be - n cceanarr-to-ask- con-
gress (or any additional (oreign nid
fundat^- -• ' "- ■ —
ending
' Tho money will be tranaferrc'd
from military aid lunds granted un-
der the mutual security pact ot lOSl,
jVhlch-QUUlOtl
"r-'tnTi nt fJif
discretion of the Fresldent
— Mc antlui e , Oc ii cral B e l v i c es - Al l -
minis tra tor Jesa I.afion •Announced
that tho United Stales will buy 35,-
000- tons-ol- crwSe ■ natural- mbbcr
iram'BtjtiLUtJa-a dcal-thatl-wlll: '
.ol-ad van ugo''-' (o-both- oeun tries.
in London, Prime Minister Win-
ston ChurchlU'a govern ment on-
nounced a new Hupcr-austcrity pro-
gram today In a dnuitlc attempt to
save Brltatn [rom bnnliTuptey and
keep thd nation In tlie front lino of
western defense.
The conservative choneellor ol the
exchequer said he proposed to dis-
miss 10.000 civil Hcn'lce employes In
tlie next six montlu, slosh Imports
of - t^l ~i rom-Uib -Vnlted-etalas-nnd
retfuce the country's already Tneager
food Buppllcs.
The nltemaUvo to the .new aacrl<
vatlon.and. uncmpbymcnt for- this
Island and disaster (or other mem'
-bonWf-tVio-oomnMmwealUi;'
- -, arraign ed'Monaiiyby Rupert police, pleaded
guilty of drunken driving charge when arraigned before Police Judge
Archie NIsbeL Judge Nlsbet fined Larrnsquct 1100 and costa and sentenced
the defendant to 30 days in Jail. The Jnll sentence will be suspended upon
poj-ment of-the fine. Juclio NlabeC saltf. - - -
In other acUon, Qlcnn H. Kaster wa-i lined t25 and costs In Twin Falls
Justice. coust-Monday-fonecklcaa driving. He was orrcsted at 3:15 am.
Sunday In the 100 block of Addison avenue west.
Boai'd Duties
Are Asked in
License^asK
I. ■ A. 01awsonrThalrman*~or' tho"
board of examiners (or tho controc-
tor'3 licensing code, appeared before
the board of city commlsalonera
Monday to seek clarKlcntloii- of the
examtnlnff t»nrd's dijtlu In approv-
ing llcehae applications.
The board Issued llcenaea to Gl
oppUcanU, however M had not been
approved by the licensing board and
have six inonths to comply with the
ordinance beforo their Ucensea can
bo revoked by the commlsslonera.
Under tho ordinance, all contrac-
tors now residing In tho city arid
carrying on huslneisea ate enUUed
■t <l alX-m nnthi lo e o m ply-withTthe+j
ordinance.
ClawBon said the legality of some
■q u a d Jons-o n th a l o nn - ti ied by t ha
cxamlnera hud been questioned.
Especially quesUoned were requlre-
mcnU ot three years -ot -experience
set by tho examiners and require-
ments on Insurance.
City- Attomcy-Robert-IT.~wrBaI-
Isen cald th ese regu lrrnient* witri
Jt-purrST'tJirclty brdlnanco .asd
the licenses could not be hellT'up
forthosbreoMiu. However. It la tha
duty of the examiners to deter-
mine If applicants comply with the
ordinance and with things they agree
to comply with when answering tl^o
question nafre.
"Ho said IHo licenses can bo re-
voked It quesUona are not answered
truthfully, and violations of some
laws con be reporUd to state and
federal authorltlea for action.
It was pointed out that
examiners and contractors wanted
from the licensing Jaw altogether.
However, It woa pointed out tho
greater number of fly-by-nlg ht con^
"trac torsTW In" mis group aniTliro
the ones who need to be controlled.
(C>BlIni>d n Pi ' '
AnotfieFBoinlier
"Forced-to~Make""
— Gooding^Landhig^
aoODlHO, Jan. 30— Another air
base and BoLse.
_.0n .the. fll ght^to-Moun tain Jlome-
n lib aaC-lhe— plano._ was ^ urm ble to
inr(rTjccnH!!(rorTJflom.flbTlltyrTr
flew oh' to BoLie where "similar con-
ditions existed, then returned to
Ooodlng with barely enough gas
to reach here. Tho crew was ready
to ball out, according to Russell
FouLten. CAA employe at Ooodlng.
The plane lelt Ooodlng for
Mountain Home at S p. m. Monday
after the right type gosoUna .had
been hauled from the olrbase.-
Weather wasn't tho only problem
Wyoming desert, . .they Jettisoned
320 gallons of dc-leing alcohol when
a. barrel spnmg a leak. When they
ichoqiiCM«ld,-U-«iil*r— «pen«d-th«-bomMM]Mleor».to-elear. <phy-«i
out the nxnes caused by the leak-
ing barrel, the entire alcohol supply
IcU-oul
^ofit SJieep!!loBeAuctioned in-
■CAltrr, - Jan. -2S-Nearly -3.0OO
years ago Christ told a story ol a
lost sheep and of how. the shepherd
searched until he had found lt and
hmught It tn mfetv . Tha-anrlpn t-
porobla Is. being . re.enacted horo-
Tuesday with tho aid of modem in-
ventions and tho sheep, once res-
cued. Is to t>e_uscd_to aid. mankind.
- *riio- stray- sheep u'aj^^dlicovctcd
Monday, ahlverlnc beneath a ledge
3S miles northeast ot here on tno
v,-est fork of Piah creek. Plana were
mode Tuesday by Carey residents to
rescue the 'half-atarvcd onlmol
from the slK-foot deep snow that
surrounds the mountain ledge and
to auction it In a Magic Valley-
iPldo sale for' tho March ol Dimes.
. Aa soon as Carey residents heatd
o( the plan they immediately sub-
mitted bids on tlie animal. At noon
the amount had' reached tl20 and
more bids were coming In, Anyone
In tho valley li ellR lble to bid on the
uiimiimirii~Kaif triay b4'"i»rw ■
Cue Pamworth who had penetrated
the mountains . lo an attempt to
rescue a herd of storvtiig horses.
Th 0 horuea. J>rOD*rly-Ol JhaTPelshr^
Carey, have been maroooed In tho
snow-cpvered mountains since 'De-
cember. Pelser had been uruble to
locato them until they were spotted
from the olr lost week by Cenar-
tusa while he was eheeklntt deer.
Saturday afternoon a county bull-
dozer tried to plow out a road 'to
the starving onlmals but was able
to get only wlth|n four miles. The
horses had bunehed up In a' clump
of n-lllDws and had , stripped the
trees -for food. On Sunday Pelser
and Fomworth. leading ^dlo
horses, 'covtred .the remaining .four
Biles tO-JJi(LJ>nimaliJ3«ir-aUtlcil.
iC*BUa<*it aa Htf It, Cdtma U '
Not Rudolph
KETCHUM, Jan. SO— If snnta
Ctaus has loat a steed. It's In
Ketchura.
Monday noon Mrs. Don-Sohaf—
fer heard a noise on her roof but
thinking )t was' enow sltdlnff off
dldn'l-bothe r- to- In ves Ugatc.— ^
In a few minutes her hustinnd
eamo home, all buityed.
"That noUo you heard," he In-
fonnod her, "was an eight-point
bull elk prancing around on our
houietop."
In his clambering around on
tho roof the elk broko the radio
aerial and snapped, the clolhcs-
llne. A number of residents took
pictures ot the elk as he'poraded
around town before leaving for
the hills.
AgPiii cy C hie f
GivesReport
city , commissioners Monday night
and ' briefly outlined the conso-
quencta aa loi u the dtar. ta coQ->
corned should county commissioner!
sever relations with the state health
department
'Ite said the state has a ided the^
city "hy 'providing JM monlhlyplus
traveling expenses (or the sanitari-
an,' and by. furnishing laboratory
services for milk analyses and X-
n>y service (or food handlers. Ha
said the latter two services would
be lost If . the local liealth unit
mlssloner O. E. Chaney said he
hot>ed tho city would not lose the
services of the health unit. Tho city
pflya - f300 ' monthly for- . the salary of
tho aonttarlan.
~ Peterson sald~the s'tato Invests
alXHlt-|ll.O00"yearIy'lirfh"o"g5ncnir
program and laboratory services. Ho
ealfl-l a-nuraes-aro "Workln gln'Mngle'
Vnlloy under the state program. In
answer to Commissioner Chester
lorco D.33 mode an emergency- l^'S"^'"* »* ^■"l^ot^
Jail Escapee Ge ts
SHOSHONE, Jan. 30— Thomas IL
Plynn, Lincoln county Jail escapee,
pi ended "guilty otflrst'dcgree burg-
Idry and escape Tuesday .morning
heloro Dlslrlrt Judge D. H. Butphcn
and was sentenced to not more than
tlvo years In the state penitentiary.
Flynn. who.was In Jail on^ tho
burglary cliargc, escaped last Juno
IS. Ho waa arrested last month tn
- . . Tucson. ArlB., and returned to Sho-^
encounleretl-by-tho-etew.-rOrerzther: TtamiBrWheaTUTSlffUeaTaroroTO^
Sutphcn last Thursday l^ynn asked
that counsel be assigned to him.
Judge Sutphen selected Jack Mur-
'Tuesday morning Flynn
pleaded guilty and waived statutory
time for passing -sentence^
U.nS.^hares Atom__
"DataAVfthGanada
WASHmOTON. Jan. 30 WJ-rFor
the first time since the war the
United Slates Is shoring some of its
try — Conado.
Tbey are not secrets about atomic
weapons, aa such. Inlormatlon on
. ihnt.au blec t- tg n't b" tr fti^i^ gin.^
en away -tinder V. S. law. But they
may have to do with production of
ntorntc explosives.
The- Interchange of Information
yilQi Canada was disclosed at a
newa conference ywlcrday by Chalr-
num Gordon Dean of the atomic
erS7 commission.
NEW BHIPS CONTRACTED
■WAaHINQTOH, Jan. 29 UD
The -navy let a contract today for
the first of a new line of rocket
ships designed for closel support ot
beachhead attacks. The award went
to Puget So und nf)dgn un rt i'>rf dg'"g
-. Scattlo.
Panel Votes
For Inquiry
OfMcGrath
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29 (U.R)— The house judiciary com- u.
mittee voted today to investigate Attorney-General J. How-
ard McGrath'a management of tho Justice deportment. ■
The committee in-atitrct session Rdoptcdja Tt*olatlon"'l3yz'
Rep. Kenneth-B. Keatinff, R., N. Y. Tho inveatination will bo
condtjctcd by four Dcmocraticiind three, RepubHcuLcomniit-^-^i
tee-membcTH. ~"~ — . ' - -
Keating has been calling for McGrath'a resignation or
ouster ever since PreaidcntlYumai^^ " "
■fts-assistantrattoi'lTey'^cncral'
in charge o£ tax fraud prose-
cutions. ■ _ .
_ln_another.j)haso of tho tax bu-
reau Bcondols. house Investigators
voted to cite Henry W. Orunewald
,Ior contempt of congress. Orune-
wald, mentioned In testimony obout
nn alleged WOO.OOO" tax shakedown
plot, had Just refused tor a second
time to answer questions at a pub-
II o hearing.
Tho commltteo also voted to cite
hla attorney, William P. Moloney.
a(tcr Moloney hod been ejected
from the'hearlng"toom" for talklng
after m jromlng to be quiet.
Other major dcvelopmenta In
congress:-- — ^
Dn- American: House -Investiga-
tors moved behind closed doors to
dig deeper Into alleged communist
Infiltration of Industry and pro-
.Icsslonal. groups In-Los Angeles.
Military pay— Assistant Defense
Secretary Aiuia M. Rosenberg asked
senate approval of a lO per ccnt.pay
boost (or olllcers as well as en-
listed men. The house has approved
the bill but tliere Is sentiment In
the senate to cut the Incrcoso pro-
posed (or olflcers.
Budget— Chairman Oeorge H.
Mahon o( the bouse nUlitan' ap-
.pEoprIatIona.aubcomitilttnniiIirtaiir
gross must make "a major etfort'
to cut 'Vaste" out o( the tCl.OOO,-
000 W) defense budget.
-RFC— senntor Maybank, D„ s. cl.
said operations of tha reconstruo-
Uon. Ilnanco. corporation aro."about
paralyzed" aa a result of the dead-
lock between the senate and Pred-
den t -tViiman nTw «ppnlntlrn f^
RPO boss. Maybanlt predicted, eaiiy.
'action. ~
Russ Charge ^
West Girding
For War HI
LONDON, Jon. 20 (DV-Runlft hiM .
charged the weatem powera with
taking, "new steps" toward a thM
wotid 'war by planning a mldeub
command, Moscow radio sold todsr. ,
- Itie-xadlo said o nota-baiidod-tha™
envoys of the throe westom pomn -
and Turkey Uit "night cIiatt*'rtho^'~
plnnD«L,tO-i[iUt-lhB,inIdeaat-Kreft —
into .-"Kmei of - lnflueno«'*'M>d- UM—
countries there as "weapons ot
war plana."
HiK' Soviet note broadcast 'I7
Moscow, aall. tho . proposed - mid eaat -.
conlmand plans were "nevst^ps ot
the United States, Britain uul
Prance In preparation for tbo thltd
world war.
Tha responsibility of thO iltuas
Uon which might arise a« » renilt
of Implementing these plana testa
wlUi the governments ot tha United
Statu and other inltlatora ot theu .
plans," the noto _saldi_
IGe westeni pow^
era of trying to hide the "aggrentva
nature" of tho mideaat commatid
loy.
Russia warned tha uMeutem
states- Uu -allied - proposals " f or'-S' -
mtdcost command vlolatad < tlia
United Nations charter, threw, thea
IgtO-jtettMn-Blmi^or-jMr .
jvoiMlQicfl tham.to bte«k«II-ti
with tha eastAm bloa^i. - -r. 1-.^ <
■WLL 'i y ^..-
Chamber liauncWni^
— Protest-on-UiSriPs
The Chamber of Commerco national affairs commlttea'
already has received response to.Iottcrs outlining its plan to
protest tax waste and government spending. ..Tlie letters- -
Tho first response was received Monday and came from"
Gus P. Backman, secretary of the Salt Lake City Chamber of
■Commarce^He-wrote-he-wiU-flubmI(i-the-"wopder ful ' BUg-t -
gestion" to his chamber's national of falis^ committee and
feels sure it probably will, undertake 'the project. ■
'—A postcftrd was received l^eBday~from"GrBrMaprM7*fl
retary o£ tho Chamber ol '
.Coinmcrcfi_ot_KokoinQ,_ind.,
China Hinted
praising tho plan and refer-
ring— to-^ts—own~activitIe»'
against governmental ■waste.
TTio letter describing tho project ,™.„.„ „ . _
hfto been moiled by Uie local chom- MTOBAM, .Korea. Jan; » 0
bcer:(o-57fl-key-dnanSc« afasa^ ^'a» communliU - Wnted-today that -
m'erco throughout the nation, tha
■United— fltatee—Oli aml icr' o l oOin -^
mbrce, various, slate chambers, tax
oasoclatlons Biid;_liifllvIduiJs,
spending as we are here In IdahoT'
and -points out thousands of copies
of protest letters ape being. prepared
for toxpoyera to mall to senatora
nd rcpresentaUves.
One physician Is handing out 40
a day to hb paUents, the letter
states, and a merehont has ordered
window signs to help bring people
Into his store (or the protest Ict-
.teta>-Hia - answer- I s^'a ate-^aita- to*
day'and'our biislness tomorrowi" ~
Other chambers aro being advised
of thclow cost o( tho toxpayer-pro-
t<Hta ■ll^I^'^^ f n d wrv PTy'^irt *'fian
you 'thinlc of a better "manner to'
help-BTouse public opinion In your
Withdrawal'of":
The hint wos cryptic and Indirect.
It Mmo durin g a meeting of-staff
"olikai "^ otnT ucoLsuporriaUffl-JLt
wIflcIPtho-Ur'if.'wramaDdijrQ ' '
"progress was being mada."
In another trues meeting. Iunr>
ever 'reds flatly rejected an >IIlod..
plan for exchanging prbonera. Th*
communists w^ told promptly thay
"must contribute something" U an
agreement Is to be reached.
Tile Chinese hands-off falnt was
made by a North Korean during dis-
cussion of on IS-page tl. N. prognm
-Oulstanding-Soppano-Presents-
Muslo for serious-minded concert
goers WAS sung Monday night by
Vivian Delia Chlesa be(oro the usu-
al "standing room only" Community
Caa o e rt a>mie n e»aMPwfay^r '
school auditorium.
Although Miss Delta Chlesa prob-
ably Is the. most outstanding eo-
tr, nppf 1- nn JU it.mrl*. In 'aeT-
erol seasons, her selections for the
most port were unfamiliar to tha
audience ond she was received not
quite aa warmly as soma -other less-
talented artists.
Oowned In a strapless, deep green
velvet evening driss, tho lovely
blond soprano opened the program
with a selection from Handel'a op-
Otha." This selection -and a
later program number from Uas-
senet's opera ""Hcrodlade" iwst dls-
pbiyed the. rich tone quaUUes of
Miss Delia. Chlesa's voice;
Slow, subdued songs dominated
thn f i rst -I hrc o-po r ts of-thfr-oonoert.'-
Diconiy and remlolsccot wax
._ ____"VaU«
do Chimin" ond"WudeaUglLeIt.'*
Two sllghtlp livelier selectlooi;
-"lysteo ..Oalantea^-and^'nwafe"*-^
Paris," along with the familiar "All
Through the Night" andean aneore;"
"Drink to Me Only With Thlna"
Eyes," concluded the first '
th« progiMa. — *- ',
Except for her nnal,«neoit selM-:
tlotts. Miss Delia Chlesa was most ■■
warmly applauded 'for her last ttana'
inograu .nuB^iera. Tbao .wtit' tbm,^ ..
humorona. opreislvaslorT ot^bMi:
"Tho Puinn;!L. «. iplrtt m t'^-'P%-:
Massui and De UIseoi^ whkh «£•',{>
hlblted -her wide Tolce nop. -nfiv^
Rubinstein's -famUlar "Sloca JSm': .
IMotThee." ' -'V--.
Other songa included PW«-»t —
-laAi*-*-BpIrituolr-"A— Msffr-D»J "
r*s* k 11^3
PAGE TWO
■ TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS. IDAHCI .
TDESDAT, ;
ManExgected
To Testify for
T. F. Hearinc
J.RuMelllewlr.-chiimdirttIrt)b^-
~l«talns"iu(sney under fnlio prcUnaes,
«u expected to teatlfjr In his de-
ienst Bt 1:30 pJn. Tuesday. Pro.ie-
culor Max Qi Lloyd Tested his caae
*t 11:40 ajn. fitter caltlns two wlt-
nobert N. W. B&Uelscn cruiS'
amlned two'outii wltnesaea nnd
mnde hl9 opening itatenient-to tho
jury Tutiday inomlnBm*~»»ld' ho
I - ejtpeclwt to provo Ltwls hnd no In-
tent- to dclratid or made no lube
reprosenlaUon.
HiB chfirse resulted from de&li
between Lewis and Chnrtcii J. Hun-
■en and James Cunpbell. Lewis Is
charRcd- with obtii|nlnit ' • tlS>2t
check from Hansen lut October
atter aereelne to order vending ma-
"chlnes from the VUclng Speclnlty
■ company. Son ftanclKO.""
Hansen testified Monday and was
croM- examined' Tuesday, momlne
by Dallelscn. A. W. Hanten. SIio-
Btiona bank mannser and uncle of
■ CJiarlca HMiBen. " Uatlfled "concern-
ing tho check. E. W. Anderlon. gen-
tfal manager of the Viking com-
pany, was crost* examined by Ball el-
sen. Campbell aUo wria recalled for
croM-examlnntlon.
Lloyd called three' wltneMts Mon^
day In & acaalon hUhU«liled
numeroui- objections- b]r BallcliBn.
—Mrs.-An nBonarrTlmD i-N (ftnt'iid ver-
tlslnn department, testified con-
ccmlns an ad Inserted In the Times-
E ■ Hewn -by -Lewis.-—
Jurors hearing tho case are Al-
bert Kolnrlk, J, Kohntopp. Harry
Dietrich. Harvey M. Peters, L. W.
Cartee, J. M. Pleree.^cd ^le«r._N,
W. Arrlrigton, ITeHn Cnudio, Cnrl
Anderson. Mrs. Harold Lancaster
and T. O. Wilson.
Rain-Making
Labeled Dud
III I HEW YORK. Jan; 3D (^J!^-Mftn-
! J tnade.iito_Mperlment*,Ui tho.eUht
' j weiterit statea wert fallurei, accord.
<.,U ing to reports roods to tha-annua
— — mcotlne of-tho Amerlcan-Meteoro-
,„ _ logical society In session here.
a J. Workman of tho New Mexico
Institute of Mining and Technology,
said tn a report to- tha -open Ing sei-
alon yesterday Uiat use of silver
lodldo had failed to' increase ^ratn' In'
western experlmenia.
. It actually decreased precipitation.
Workman said, In advocating much
more research Into tho practicability
of raln-maklnff.
Dr. Irvlns Longmulr. rain -making
experimenter for tho Oonerat Elec-
tric company, said the western ex-
pe rlmenU "Bave I nconclua lve
"iflm."'Tho"HtpFr&nenu wtfe"aKiK;
doned about the end of last year,
hs said.'
Former Resident
Of BurleyJPasses
BURLEV." Jan.'"M — Hljah Deo
Drake HUllarTSr former resident of
Burley, died Saturday at a BoUe
honpltal.
,Mr. Hlllls_wa8 bora July^H. lBia,
In McMtngle, Tenn., He had been a
reildent oI-Bolae-for-lO yeari, going
there from Burlcy where ho had
lived for IB years. He wa.i a retired
farmer and a member of tho Chrla-"
Uan church In Burloy.
Besldea hUi widow he Is sdnlvcd
by two sons, Manlon R. Klllls, Boise,
and Walter. D. HiUls. Nyian. Ore,;
one slater. Mrs. Beulah Toylor,
Coleman. Tex., lour grandchildren
re«t-s» nd(^l<lr«nT-
liomber Explodes;
13 Jump to Safely
Funeral services were held Tues-
day artcmoon at the Summers
chapel with the Rev. Hartzell Cobbn
nffioiwUpg, Burial waa maao al
_]3aTachutedJuiicIy,taday_JuaU)ctoiB
the big bccnber blew up In mld-nlr
with ft force that shook parts of
1t)kyo like an earthquake.
Tho Korea-bound bomber, pbi...
doned" when 'It developed trouble
shortly after the tokeoir, -dlslnt«-
erated Ip a giant flaoh witnessed
Yij *hnuinndn hnmpnuipt.honnfi
Tokyo workers.
The wreckage' fell In flames In an
open area south of Tokyo.
An Information officer at the
bomber's bo^e said sovcral of tho
13 crewmen sustained Alight Injuries
wide s
Tho last r
jMiIed safe nBSrly four houralalcr.
Rebate Ordered"
_IiLLevy_Mistake
BOISE. Jan. as (ffV-Dlstrlet Judge
CE. Wlnstoad haa held - that -tho
marchandlse of Gears, Roebuck
— oo mpa ny,— Boise,— woa - asse »ed-
_roneouslj_ln_1050_iind-orderel_Ada
towily to iclOT»il »*,18J(.1I) In prop-
erty taxes.
The decision waa on appeal from
order o f thiiUtttax^comniiMlon.
which upJiMd tho county assessor.
Ttie Hospital
d-^7-tO-S- p
ADMITTED
'"■JanIco"Crook,*Mr3rEverett" Jones.
.Zets Comnuck, Mrs. Lillian Zelt-
. ler and;. Harold Lackey, all Tn'ln
' Falls; Mrs. WUllam J. Spaeth, and
Mrs. Claude Rookstool, twth' Jer-
ome; Mrs. Jack Huey. Eden, and
Mrs, Riiold McQulte and Mrs. Joe
Robertaon. both Buhl-
DisnnssED
Mrs. Qeorge Olscn and son. Oa.
■borne Lll|y.-Mrs.-Leo-aihrlnirnnd-
daughter,. Mrs. .VlrsU Kolnd and
son, James Keesan, Connie Janason,
-Mrs — Dais Ovrens. Mrs. Marlon
Smith and ^trs. Fred Schott, all
-.Twln»-p»lU!"^n!.— Harvey-Blekel-
haupt and son and ^trs. Omar Llnd-
■ a ey a n d.aau g htWr-Bulil ;-M[».-M ax
Martin and daughter, Jerome; Don-
ald Dleti. Hansen: Mra..C8lln Van-
Ea to n. Burley. and Milton K oiad.
— MMBltn
From UP and A.P Uemrta
nuglo Valley— Partly cloudy to.
-Jtlfht and Wednesday. Illfh Wed.
— MMday I S-«<t-M . l aw lo n lirlit-13-nr ■
' :0.' TnrIn~FaiIs~ tempera lure at B a.
ibday.-JS. ' ■
— ■—. — =^—lui.SX2Mn^t-..
fiuUon Utx. Uln. Pcp.
»ilt L*ki f:itT -
Keep the White Flag
of Safety Flying
Now' XI days without a
traTftc~aeath~ in^aur'Maiita
Vallev. '
Chiu'cli Plans
Early Sei-vice
-Recognizing that Sunday la the
only day on which many f ami Ilea
and Individual.-! may seek outdoor
recreation, tlie Presbyterian church
will. Inaugurate. It chapel service at
8 a.m. Sunday. It was announced
Tuesday by . the Rev. Donald B.
Blnckstone, pastor.
The Rev. Mr, Btackatone said the
serilce Is Intended for the oon-
cnce of aWcni; hu n tern, fisher-
1 nnd othern who pinn outd&or
itcitntlon on Sunday. He aald It
would not be necessary to "dress"
foj the service.' Services — start
promptly at Q and close at B:4B ajn.
Junlora nnd Junior high school
.-the'-
■youthir-wlll— bo-cxcuKed'
chapel at G:IS a.m. to attend a class
led by Mrs-Honry Powers. Tho lerv-
tees are not restricted to members
of- til e- Prcsby lerlan_ch uroh.-Eve ry—
one Is welcome, he said,
Tile early service wUI be a per-
monent port of tho church's pro-
sram. The Rev. Mr. Black stone
pointed out the early services wilt
permit families to attend worship,
services and still have a free day it
outdoor recreation.
Services Held for
, Woman in Rupert
— RUttniT:- Jan:- SB — Funeral - serv-
ices for Mrs. Wllllom L. Douglas
were- conducted at 3 . pm. Sunday
at tho Goodman chapel with tjie'
Rcv.-W.. D. Carter, Baptist .pas tor,
of ft dating. Burial was made In tlie
Rupert ccmeUiry.
Two solos were ounff by Hal Mat-
"thc w ar*- Hurley; — accomirnnlcd — ty
Mrs. Matthews and a solo was sunn
by Mrs. Ray D. Armstrong, who
played her own accompaniment.
pftllbeorers weco P. E. Carson,
Eric Holmes, William Bishop, Clar-
enco Hollenbeck, .Ed Jullon an d
^raiH^pcntlK —
AsaUtlnB-^wlth- tho -flowers _wcrc
iCirfl. Charles PlcKcrlnft, Mrs. Ethel
a l lle-ipl c, Mrs. Aima Jullon and
■Roj5"H15EViiKr
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Masters and
Bon, Steven, of pocolma, CnllC. and
MrirUoy d -Somcr«llle..ean~Oabtlcl,
Calif.; attended the funeral.
Via;
^Funerals —
Sailey— Funeral services for
■Ja n >es- M c W lllls- w Ul- b e-helil- a t_3.
p. m. Wednesday nt tho Community
ehurcli with the Bov. Vernon Kcn-
In the Halley cemetery.
JEROME — Funeral services "(or
Mr^r-P anUncJCulM- w lll-bo h eig.i
3 pjn . Wedncidny nt the Method-
W rhuh:ii""WltJi^thB-RerT— J.— Di-
Creiro— officiating. Burlolr-wlU-T-bo.
mnde-ln Uie Jerpme, cemetery.
TWIN FALLS— Services for Al-
fred John Alnswort[i will bo held at
p. m. Wednesday at the White
mortuary chapel wltlY Elder J: E.
Allred presiding. Interment will be
made In Sunset Memorial park.
The Twin r^lls. American Legion
poa t- w 1 1 1 -co n d ue t-m li 1 1 ary-itra vealdc-
rltes. Friends may call at the White
mortuary Tuesday ■ evening 'and
Wednesday until 3 pjn. " -
MAGSC
THEAIRE-KIMBEBLY
WED. and THUB.
Action Taken
By Grangers
For Kihiberly
imroERL'KzjanzijgrTtiqrtftilq'
drive, a farm Institute, tho tiifllc
safety campalfm and a membenihlp
drive were discussed, at a meeting
of the KImberly Orange Monday
night ■at the Orango hall.
A square dance sponsored by the
Orange for the polio drive netted
t31.10 and the Orange contributed
$33 from Itn- treasury In tho cam-
paign. O. Barton, chairman of
collection* -In - the rural . aroai^onld
solicitation has not' yet been com-
pleted. ■
The Orange decided' to sponsor
the farm InsHtuto In KImberly
Thursday and FYldoy. Men will
meet all day both days at . the
hitch Aohool and women will meet.
In the altemoon at the grade school
lunchroom. Mrs. Elizabeth Drowns
la chairman oC the women's division.
She la asking members to fiunlsh
cakes for the meeting.
Following _ a —discussion . of the
traffic, safety program the Orange
voted to- endorse the Trnmc" Safety
Volunteer proftrnm 100 per cent. ■
Announcement was made that the
KImberly Orange will be host to the
Pomona Orange meeting on Feb.'
0."The flcndlnff of pnckngcs.to needy-
persons In Korea also was dlscusacd
but no action was taken.
During the literary program the
master . was . presented with _ioad
com by Ceres In an hnnual -Orange
ritual. Henry Peterson played i
laxophone solo and a rhytiim ntmi'
tJcrwith'spooniinirwas-aKompifi'
led by Tliclma - Lowe. Mrs. Maud
Newcomer nnd Mm. Drowns gave
-readings and a hairdresslng
■ test -wan-he Id,
Eighth Car Death
Reported in State
PAYETTE, Jan. 20 fUJ5— Another
Idaho traffic fatality haa been re-
ported. It la tho eighth this year,
compared to II for the same period
last year.
_Loul.i_E_ Pennington, about .30.
a Payette sxtxtT, wns killed and his
wlf 0 crl ticaily-ln jured-Monday-nlght
.when thelr.corJilt. a- con Crete -bridge
abutment near here-
The car failed to make a aUgHt
turn and hit the abutment of the
Poyette-rlver-brldEe-nccordlnifto
Payslto County Coroner Olf Shaffer.
Three' small children, at home at
the time of accident, survive.
Births Report*
OOoblNO. Jan. 20— Bin .
the Ooodlnc Memorial hospltaMur
Ing the past month Include daugh-
ters to Mr. and Mrs. 011tt(}rd Blssell,
Jones, Mr. nnd Mrs. Enrl Jorvls,
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Klowltter.- Mr.
and Mrs. James Hume, and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Hume, all OoodlnR, and
field... -
Sons were born to Mr. and Mrs,
WUllam OwlnKs. King Hill; Mr. and
Mrs, Edward Relman. Mr. ond Mm.
John^ShoiTO—Mn-nnd-MrB;- Albert
Jlcan'or. Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Westen-
dorf, all Ooodlng; Mr, and Mrs.
Sidney Edwards, Dietrich: Mr. nnd
Mrs. Melvln Pope, Richfield; Mr. and
Mrs. Dnn Oorrcll. Ooodlnit. and Mr.
aiid-^rs.-rMiirv[n Kisucr. TutUe.
MARSINO VISITORB
-HHYBtTB^J.- JanrJff— Mrrand Mrs;
Ralph McComtM and family are
visiting Mr. ojid Mrs. W. A. Hnlc
In Marslng.
|756JEDr_Weet's_»
-Projec+Gharged
LOS ANOELES. Jan. M «T—
PlumlKra enmed as much as ilSO
_f OE_n._iv cekii -work-and laborer* .
frequently were paid $2S0 n week
at' the atomic cncruy commli--
slon's Nevada teit site, accord-
ing- tn-.test_lmony..-at _jn_AE O
ieaiing—""
Tho hcarlnu yesterday was on
a petition by McNeil Contracting
company for rclnstnlcmcnt of Its
canceled ^iaoi|QOO contract for
The AEC aald-the.cQntruct.wwi.
tHcnor-
1 an order to work overtime
id-on Sundnya-and -hollilnyB. —
McNeil attorneys snld the
Jian a. v
mplota.
per cent of tlie Job by dend-
-llno^becauic_HQddock:EiiElncera..
.Inc.,..'.'plrpted" McNe il la bor a((er
getting a »2:siXl~JlU);=mt=pms-
conlract at tho site. - ■
Oeontc N. Breslln. McNeil's
counsel, aald Haddock was able
to pay plumbcra as hlRh as STSG
weekly nnd laborers saao weekly,
while lump-sum contractors were
able to pay only normal wages.
moxY
ettone.
> HIT SONtSI S ROT SIAKI
Twin Falls News in B^^ef
Sboir, Slated'
Members ' of at. Edward's PTA
plan to attend a ipeclil ahowlng of
"Room lor One More" at the Or-
phe um-theater-at - 10: 30 aTiPLlJiycd:
ncsday.
Shew Foitponcd
' A. variety ahoiv achcduled next
Friday by .the- Merfiorlal .LutHem
school PTA has bcen.isbstponed un-
til a later dat« because of weather
conditions. .
eloni From I'arlejr
■Dr;- and -Mrs.- Wallace Bond have
returned from Loa Angeles where
he attended a convention of the
tlonal Research Study club on
diseases of the eye, ear, nose and
throat. The featured speaker was
Sir Stewart Duke-Elder, Ixihdon.
England, an International authority
on diseases of the eye,
Bx-Itoldenta' Sought
Four (ottner residents of Twin
mis are being sought by Tracers
company, a New Yorfc flrm whlch
apeclollus In finding mUslng stock-
holders to rccelye dividend pay-
ments. The four are E. H. Oates,
T. J. Woods. H. F. Allen and Clyde
O.- Anderson. All received mall at
Twin Falls 35 to 30 years ago and
Anderson's last known oddress Is
330 Shdihone street south.
Auto Crashes"
—Are Reported
Boveral colllilona-wore reported to
the ahorltl's office and city police
. Mondoy-bul .n o . InJ uriaa -ware -1 Istad,
John H. Lively, 343 Blue Lakes
boulevord south, was' the -driver of
a 1037 Pli'mouth sedan which col-
lided with a ISHB Piymout)) sedan
driven by Marvin A. McConnell, 2SD
Sixth avenue north, at Second
street and third avenue east at 0:GS
p.m. Monday. Both cars were dam-
aged,
A collision Sunday attcmoon one
and one - fourth miles north of
Uaglo mountain on-RoOk-oreek rond
was reported to the sheriff Monday.
Cara were driven by Bennle A. Rno-
deir"route~3.— FIler,^«rid Clarence
Nye. Tn'ln Falls. ' Fender damage
resulted,
A .Chevrolet driycil.by_Mar^
vln D, KcMler, Edon, cbtllded with
a Chevrolet truck driven 'by Ufln
C. Wood, route 3..Tii1n FalttTat
13:10 p.m. .J^onday a mllo west of
the Hansen bridge. The right side
of the car was damaged as Kcsslcr
attempted to pass the truck and
found In.iutflclcnt space between tho
truck and a snow pile.
Jerry Kolrer was tho driver of n
Chevrolet sedan which collided with
ft Bul rt Etdnn driven by Rclna J.
DoVrlcs, route 1, Twin Foils. oT*
pjn. Monday on the road to Magic
mountain, according to n report to
the- sheriff. Both cars were dam-
A gravel truck txlng backed from
E-gnrage In the 30Q block on Main
avenue west collided with a passing
car driven by Clarence C. Eldredge,
route -4,""BuhI,'at'0:0S pjn, Monday,
-Driver ot the truck waa Alfred ^R.
Roy, 350 Tj'lcr streeL No dnmoEO
occurred to the truck but the left
side of the car was smashed.
MirrUce License
Warren Archibald and Phyllis
Walkiir. both PocateUo. were Issued
a marriage license Monday by the
mimty -^^fyV — -~- —
Meeting SlaUd
Townsend club No. 1 Will meet at
3 pjn. Wednesday at 335 Third a'
nue north. ,The meeting is open
the public. ■ ^ ■ ■
Trade Name Filed
Robert J,. Griffith and NeU S.
Oriffltti. Twin Falls, Monday filed
a - certificate— of— trade— name ~Ior
Shorty's cafe, 310- Potu-th
west.
Name Omitted
The name ot Thomas MIchnel Cn/
hill. Twin Falls,- waa InadvertenUy
omitted from-a.report JlstUiff selec-
tive service reglstrnnta being called
for Induction Feb. i at Botse. /
ExecQtlvo Retuma
Ralph Kalaher. Scout exeeuUvo.
haa returned from a conference at
Portland^attcndcd_by_3!i;scQut cx--
ecutlves from the Pacific northwest
and Alaska.
InqDtrlea Annrerod
In response to numerous Inquiries,
Lloyd C. Yoing, manager of- the so-
cial sepurttr field office here, points
out Inderal social security benellta
should not be reported as Incone in
filing federal Income Uuc returns.
Blrlha
— Daughters -wars .bom-Mond ay - a t
Magic Valley Memorial hospital to
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd -Olsen. TUIn
Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Huey,
Ed en.. A-£an_waa _ bom _ to -Mr.- and-
Mrs. .Claude RookslocI, Jerome,
Prorram Scheduled
Music ot Ocorge Gershwin and
Ferdc Grofc will bo featured on the
program, "Mualc -ThrouBh ■ tho
Years," sponsored at 10 p^n. Thurs-
day over radio station KTFi by the
Twin. Falls Music club. A piano
prelude will be played by Paul
Black and Mrs. Max Brown will sing
..twp_OerKhwln. numbers,. Bccordlngs
.also, will _be. played.
Charles Scribner
Dies atJkge of 95,
Charles. H. Scribner, DS, died at
i a. m. Tuesday at a local rest home
fottowlnt; a brief lllne.is.
He wns born Nov. la, 1050, In
Rosendnlc. Wis., and had resided
In Twin Falls.slnco ID4G. A painter
by trade, he was d member of the
Congregational church of Rosen-
dale.
He la survived by one brother,
V. W. Scribner, Twin Falls.
] ]7ipnd« mny r p1\_nt. |.>^i< Tiyln T^i^lli
' mortuary from 1 to 0 p. m. Wednes-
day. The remains will be sent to
Hosendale, Wis., for funcrol
and burial.
Parldng Fines
city police collected UO In bonds
for parkins violations Monday.
Posting SI each tor overtime park-
Imt were Edith Pcterman. J. B. Ad-
dlngton. Loris H. Navln (four), Jlni
Clnrk, Florine Oee. Phillip Hance,
.W. W. Thojtins, Byron Thomas, 0,
C, Blair, Mrs. Howard Ro-u, Jim
Norton. E. n, Bnsom. Clifford Ma-
lone. Tom Boyd. Frank Mulder. Mrs.
"WftUdceTloiid (Iwol. H. Q. Forta'trr
k Mrs. Anderson, Bill Abbott (two)
and Gordon Oray (two).
Carl Woslcy posted S3 for over-
time parking In n lO-mlnute nme.
E. H. Peler.1. Bill Atkins. C. D.
Talks Slated
For Imports
Of Gas Fuel
^wAfiiiiKaTDH.:JiuL:m(u,nEroB
federal power commission has
scheduled a 'hearing to begin here
April 8.on,four applications to Im-
port nntu/al gas from Canada to
the padtlc northwest.
■ The projects would give the area
lis first natural gas aervice.
Firms seeking FPO authority to
lerye- the- area are Northweit Hal-
uiil Oas company. New York City;
BicKlc northwest "Pipeline -corpora-
rion, Houston, Tex.; West Coast
^mnimlsiltm company. Inc., Wil-
mington; Del., and Olacler Oas com-
pany, Butte, Mont. None of tho
firms coof operate natural gas pipe
lines. . ■ -
Norlhweif Natural la ^aeeklUB, per-
mlulon to build a •03.000,000 plpo
system to cany gas from Canada
to areas In Idaho, Washington, and
Oregon and then back Into Canada
for use In British Columbia.
The si'stem would include MS
miles o[ main pipeline -with a dally
delivery capacity of 3fiS,000,000 cubic
Pacific Northwest wants to build a
|17(,1M,900 system which would link
the Texas gas reserve areas with
BOS fields In AlberU and the Pacific
northweit It would servo markets
In arcBs ot Utah, Idaho, Wjishlng-
Wa, Oregon and Vancouver.ln Brit-
ish Columbia. - - -
West Coast Transralesloa -Company.
Is seeking authority to build a Ki,-
flllO,000-plpcllne-ayatem— to^auppiy
markets In Oregon and Washington.
The proposed 616-mlle- pipo-llne
would Import sas from Alberta.
— Qlneier-compony-ls-aeoklnF-au-
thorlty to build a flsa-mlio pipe line
system to Import sas from Alberta
to areas In Motjtana. Idaho and!
Washington. The firm, did not
estimate how mudi the project
would cost.
Pleas of Innocent
Enteredat Burley
_H I TRLE Y.. J an^ a&— Tom- Orouch ,
Burley, pleaded Innocent to two
charges of Issuing checks with In-
suiflcltnt funds In the bank when
arraigned before Probate Judge
He nry W . Tucker Tuesday morning.
One o C~lh~e ch org cso gainst Crouch
_.'a felony and tho other is a mis-
demeanor. Judge Tucker snld. No
dale has been set for a preliminary
hearing.
Crouch wa.i brought before Judge
Tucker Monday but reserved his
plea to both charges. Tho Judge
set ball at $3,000 on one chargo and
11,000 on the otlier lind set Tues-
day morning as the time for enter-
Crouch was placed In "tho county
Polio DANCE
JEROME
MOOSE HALL
Seeit Today;
Witness pacing floor as time for
court testimony draws near , . . City
employe tihhappy over flat Ure . . .
Corarolsaloner, Al. P.. KelaonJooklng
■awake -at " brea kfast-tlmc-and'COm-
mlssloncr O. E.. Chancy very much
awake at lunch despite lengthy city
commission meetins al previous
night . . . Dick Sosn advUlng Fred
Malts on parkins Ucket problem . . .
OenC Erlnnlng as he tells about
salesmen's frowns and gleams while
city council kept changing minds
about Venetian blind bids , , . cig-
np-tte nmnVfr TPllnhlng gift. Oxaz .-
Gent looking doubtful about gct-
Uns cor to atreet through sluah
frozen on driveway , . . Ernest
Craner and WUllam R, Smith tak-
ing off on Inspection trip . . . )Vlt-
ness slnidng In chair as cross-ex-
amination tires him , , , Guy Ryman
pleased over gift . . .Just seen; Fred
Rudolph, Walter Day, Agnes Stnink,
Mel Dolling and Victor Fliflet , . .
Concertgoer .dcscribhiK mutual
atarea between balcony and main
floor audlencea r. . BUI Patera on
crutches but around to join cronies
at colfoe shop .V, And overheard:'
Many commenta on excellence of
Monday night, concert.
Cold Eases East
Flood Conditions
lIARIEnTA, O., Jan. 30 W— BltWr
winter weather eased the ponder-
ous .aweep_Qf_a.thrce-atato -Otilo
river tlood^today. But 7.000 still
TibmcleM at«i"nIne"wero dead."
_ Sub-frcetlng Icmpemturei caused
raging Ohio river trlbutnriea to
crest 13 hou rs ahead of time and.
'two toTJireo teefbelavr the expected
This reduced the flood threat to
down-river communities. The
weather bureau at Cincinnati said It
was cutting down tho depths It ex-
pected the Ohio to reach at cities
westward toward the Mississippi
river.
Authorities said hardships front
the weather .were not pronounced
at^oriettn a..few-houra-.ahcad-of-
the- 44-f oot crest rolling down from
■Wheelinff,"' W." ■ Va.. "on a' schcdule"
which should bring It here today.
CONTRACT APPROVED '
BOISE, Jan. 38 1^1 — The state
board or -examlnera hoa^approved
award of n $087.00 contract to Mil-
ler and Crippen, Ooodlng, for chang-
inii the llghtins ai'stcm at the' state
school for deaf nnd blind.
RussDe
who operKiei j
Wel'.fn^.;
Ttlani »
TaxA?ei
2-Year"s
BOSTON, Jin jlq.
ane>--was lenien^
imprisonment tai &
day for aeetpun, t
ternal revenut tevJ,
chuactu. ™
First "of I
to-»l4-na"tVl
scandals, tht !
was denied i
4="«d bv rwtisl
Wj^niH. jr.A
of accepiini Ilia hi
algnlng false tsj Utaa]
toUng llBOflOO. ^
Judge WyuntUt.
year prison loan
Ing Indictment B
of the fines on ua
ORPHE
— Empli_
Timeictvflii- —
Burley
Clnikston
Cocur d'Alene
GoodjnK
--IdnhoFwlJs
Kcnncwlck
LaGrsnde
' LcwUton
Moscow
Ontario
• ■ Pasco
Pendleton
Pocatello
■ Pullmnn
Richland
Spolcanc
Twin Falls
■WolUWalln
_ Mondays^ ruFridayB^__'
Buy one full fare for your^r-
self, then pay only HALF '
■FARE for all other members
of. your immediate family!
■ Save time! Save money!
mm
M«/<>» (&^^/ See>^ eoiyoMi
S'luiitbokir Autonimli Drlv. or OvirdHvi ovallobli In oil itioJ* ..
TWIN FALLS MOTOR CO. J
W FOURTII AV tTNIllr ^<^i
jpaties
0se Task
,jled esUbllah-
K^Mt 01. board or
faSuennolro which
ff-mS He. even nug-
■vSSntJ be examined
IfSS period or .W
(duslon. the -boiiTii
,..jr or waiting until
„-befote-(l«l<llns- oO.
Z,^ii^^o rumbh veno-
M Iht tliy hall nhould
iTonmiMlon'^" ■Ncbon.
iTftitoim R. J- Schwen-
fSttietlclKy-Bl'ls being
WZotase er Bears, Roo-
i-i-TiiBT, -Venetian Bllna
tSwrian-a Maalo Val-
JLjDtw traffic code wns
Cjuiteond rending. "
CKipprovcd for - "
iMPHf^*" Of ft framo
• »lrport property
^7 till were rejected
J cm MnnnBer Smltti
J, voOd iilonB' WftS
^^'th"e~oirer»-tor-TtiD
—B.uderi were Hiirold
BciSaond" avenue eaat.
■ uia Mill". Klmbcrly.
Its policy on mslntenuice of private
■ewer llnea between Iho Inlerala and
n point tljree reet imlde property
lines. He enw the porUon U laid by
tho-ctty ondtaald for by property
ownen, Wt-rtpladriji tho aicUcnis Is
not prov}fled^ln_lho plumbing codes
''and U an expcnso for Uio city.
Smith said this eould be a method
of reducing, expenditures. Ballelsen
pointed out the section Is on public
and jirlvata property, and the bonrd
authorlEed Young to check on poll-
elca In other Idi^o cUlea,
LiP«d to tmnaSer $!.•
I federal airport en-
KuiI'doo'n area lund to
T( (Bid. iud f3fH2 from
Lj ttdcmptlon and In-
■btSet'if"^ fund. The
T put of that taken out
^fiteai but wns left over
1(5 project. The latter
yoa IMl from the gen-
^SU been -replaced by-
M Chsnie*
mast, city engineer and
■stiUc votlu, dlfcunaed'a
^ IBe future Improve-
idljihop which would
Sittd 111,000. It would
fltst tha meter repair
Jaira provided for the
■the dty hall, cleaning
I initalllng a rail to
«, dlwnal parking
Ej ibop section, a $3,000
f Ifl UihUns faculties,
■et 11.000 for Improving
■ib»t 1700 for painting,
Tiiijactnt lot. changing
l-mirfftolng-th*- -ley—csirTiompan!
I Iha floor ' of the
m of tlic rules, the
ii»Mth two cUisaltt-
Wt!sa plsnt operntora
Isd toto one and tho
Etntmin placed
Mir Fore man
adopted at-the
b/, J. Pitgerrlnf: long-
a «bo nould retire U
lUns duly u needed
7 with full rctlre-
■ikie lC^ The operators
^hirren i232 aiid
". wid 'PIlHerrlm'.i
ive the city about
|d the bonrd to clarity
fiiiWSFOR
VOMEI
. Still Low _
TJied as fast as It la buUt us
the supply of blood at the com-
niun.lty^blQpd bank- con Unues to
be rather low.-M agio. Valley Ma-
Btorlal hospital laboratory per-
Bonnel reported Tuesday.
— TJlO-JiUlJcly^caday. momlnc
-lnemdod*noor-tirop!nt3 - onypc"
O. a iair.suppIy^I type-A. no b
but some AB.;
Blood was donated last week
by 13 person*. Including 11 friends
or relatives donating for patients
10 blood tMuik volunteer* and one
(tonor representing the Prcaby-
tctlair church under the
munlty plan.
rarklng Dlseuwed
The matter oT Improper parkins
In the Industrial area was discussed
by Smith who said he and' other
city oUicloIs had made an Invcstl-
gaUon and Instructed Police Chief
Howard Olllette to Btudy and rem-
edy the attuntlon. Ha sold the vio-
lations have been going on lor years
and ho' porllculor concern is guilty.
_ Ollletto said there are no sidc-
. walks . OIL curbs iii-soma-of-tha - areas,
making enforcement difficult. Ho
cited the dty shop as one source of
trouble, but Smith said this has
boen_ rfirrrflffl, ■ .
dm Sueidlion
The police elilef said tho problt...
has been corrected sradunJIy, but
suggested tho commLwloners not
allow rampa over sidewalks. He
also suggested something be done
about In-ntalltng the curbs and side-
walks. The old city hall was one ol
tho places llated oa having nunpi U
the sidewalk. Parking on sidewalks
woa one of thfl problems pointed
out by tno'elljrmanag'cr.
— Emllh-sald-clty-otflclnls 'toured
the Induatrlnl area last week^oad
spotted nearly 30 places whfiro park-
iHR could be rearranged for safer
driving and where abandoned mn-
terials should _bejnoved-olf_publl»
property. .Parking at wronij angles
was noted. ,
A memornndum of locations was
given. to aiUctte for Investigation
and correction where practicable.
Copies were given to tho commis-
sioner!.
Lkcniei luued
Tho following licenses were Is-
sued:
Taxi parking, tw o stalls each. Val-
Btreet north, and DeLuxe Cab
pony, on Second street south. Earl
Bates.
— iUoUli-Gnrrlt. - „. .„
Mnttlu; HcUo moVd. Pccd Schoil:
Moon motel, Mnrtha.S.Xroukhitc
^- Hotel.- Ne wTloa crionrho tel. . \
Horn Hoops.^r. ■
Taxlrfl'lver, aeorge II. Scott.
Beer, Jim's place, Leona Beck-
stead:.. Magle city market. . 0. -E,
Davidson, and 0. P. Sltnggs, H. H.
Stokes.
Foilowlnit the meeting, City Man-
ager Smith, wlio has resigned ef-
fective Feb. 3, was presented a brief
caso by board members. '
Wato- Leader
Declares U, S:
Needs Change
TIMES^NEWS. TWIN FALLS,- IDAHO.
Vacancies Listed-
For Qvil Service
Federal civil scr^-lco offlclaU in;
nouncc cxnmlnaUons 'for appoint-
ment to tho posUtons oE rate exam-
iner. M,ilo_ to. «JMO- per- year, nnd
commun icn tl oni— Kpecl aH.it;:r*f td er
graph or_t*lcphone). »5.0BO to |7W0
per year. In the Alaska' communl-
dtloni system ond other, ancndes
In the Seattle area.
Vacancies also are anticipated for
trainees. %\2ta per year, and In
other pMlUons tn the PacVIlc r,ortb-
wc.ii In eonducllng personal Invcstl'
saUonl tor loyalty and sulUblllly In
- .conn ection with federal cmDlor-
narioir-harTwrnfl-iHrt'n'rat. ■ :-.
Applications and further Infor-
mation are avatiable from Agnes
Slronl!. local civil ser\-Iee secrelnrj-.
the Twin Falls postoftlce. ■
hi-hiJ^-«" "PI^ll'-nE^ommunlsta
hlsh pinc„. shrwKHeti off as a
foTfiJ!^'' =<»nraunlst-ln3plred
twJ « which have coal
ihlchT°" Korea.
™,o'?ces'''"'^;''' '^^-^^--^
Bjiih.. V "as Domo ana
Us d&lared-hlstoiT shows
B nation cnnnht survive a 30 per
^r^l^^ /nd wtld this naUon-a
IW taxes on .an egg from hen
consumer » an exampl?.
.in?V.' »d«lnlalraUon has apent
""^^"'f'totnl for all previous ad-
mtnLiirailoM. Ha cited retrench-
X„ , Canada and lUted the only
•^^y tor. the United BtAia to get
Uotll V-^- -shongo-admlnlitra-
dolncstie and foreign g!v<r-
away uJ-oitraraa and bankrupUng
ftasie. WhUla quoted Daniel Wcb-
ff*'' "iklns who con reconstruct
me'nL'' ■'^ of a demollshed_govera-
RcporU on MmUds
He reported -bi1eriy-on""a national"
coinmltlee meeting ' and—weitem
state eontcrcncB recently held at
f^,*^nclsco. and congrntulnted
■thc-iDcarcmb-i'inerpfop^Eis ind
occompll.ihnienta. Whltia was Intro-
duced by. state Sen. fiarl Iru'ln,
Klmbcrly,
--OfjjcrrT-r<e!ectea'byWc!ub"Mc
Mr.L Kenneth Kevcren. president;
Jlrs. DouBlns Dean, vice president;
Mrs. Howard Parish. Buhl, secre-
tary, and Mrs. Frank Potter, Klm-
bcrly, treasurer.
Upon motion by Mrs. 0..H. Kren-
gei, the club Is Inviting the state
central cwnmltlce to hold tlie Ida-
ho iiomlnaUns convention In Twin
Palls. Tlic committee will maet Peb.
0 to decide tho time and place of
tho-convcnUon.— ^ — —
Mrs. .Krenstl^was 'glven-a-sland-
;g vole of confidence as vice chair-
man of the county central com-
mittee. ' ~
Tlie program Included two vocal
sotos by Mrs. Mw Brown, accom'
panled by Mrs, O." P. DuvalL •
Benefit Dance Is
Held at Fairfield
PAIRPIELD. J«n. 30 — Mcmbcw
of the El!c Crcclj/aranse sponsored
a benellt dance Saturday evening
at tlio Uclon Wi.lt lor Gordon I^ee.
son of Mr. MUl Mrs. Harold Leo.
Leo recently ("re turned "'fronr~Uio"
Gooding hMpltni where ho was
treated for fAclnl wounds rrcclvcd
when a .33 UiUct lodged In his jaW
bone. Lee Was sponsored at Boys'
state- by th^ Orange last spring.
Mr. and (Mrs. Sten Prostenaen
nnrLdert_llic|cominltteoJn-charRo ol-
UiD dance i'hlch netted 1123. Mualc
for round iind square dancing was
under the/ direction of Frostensen
imttJDOJ'd.parrlion.-: ,
Fornjier^esident
Funeral Held
JEHOME. Jan, 20— Funeral a
Ices for Harry a Frith *,-ero held
Friday nrtemoon at the Wendell
Methodist church. Tlio Rev. Harry
Starbuek. pastor of the chureh, offi-
ciated. Mrs. Fred Eaton was soloist
and Mrs. Starbuek, plnnlsU
I Pallbfnirrfl ^■i-it Hnrnlrf fTK.llna,
■Blair Smith. Buasell King, "l^m
Large" Crowd
Tui-ns Out at
Tntm rait OaO
occupant In evco' block In the city
'I'osl:. funds for the drive.
Start of.tiw mother's- portion of
the campalgo-^li be signaled by* a
long blast from, the flto siren.
At the Legion hall meeting at-'
tended hy more than 00 wonjcn,
speakers Included Mrs. Prankle -Al-
worth. treasurer ot the Twin Falls
ch«pt*r,-and-Mrs.— Llzil o-pctersoiir
Buhl, county drlte chalrraan,
Mn. Henry Wills, chairman of tho
rrsldenthil solicitations, announced
everything was "all set" for the
Thursday night campaign.
.-Resldenli are urged to turn on
their porch lights promptly at 7
P. m." shB.iald.-rThls will be Uio
signal for. tha mother In your block
that she Is welcome at your homo
and tlstr will enable her to avoid
Injury while making her rounds.
"Every house In the city will be
visited during the one hour tho drive
piogrtssts." she continued.' "Wo ask
ihol everyone cooperate to moke
this perl of the'March of Dimes *
aueccii."
Early Indications are that the
drive total this year will exceed tliat
for 1031.
- Records show that- flvo cates' ot
polio havo'been reported In Twin
gglb.pountj.alcce-Dee- l -and-thiiro
have been, two deaths from tho
disease.
OC Decio Passes
DECLO. Jan. W— Word has been
eelved here of the death of Mrs.
Delia Ha.ikell Clarke, former Declo
resident in Salt Lake City.
Mrs.; Clarke was bom Peb. It,
1075, ot Pnyson, Utah. She w
widow; or Amos R. Clarke.
Surjlvlng are one son. Olen
Clark^. San r^anclsco; tlirco daugh-
ters. Mrs. Ruby Rowo and Thelma
anrkl!.~Sttlt "Loko City, ahd~MrB".
Mildred— Campbell, - Ogdcn,— -nine
BurearFiles Suit"
For $109 Payment
Protesslotiat Adjustment twirttiU
filed suit in Justice court Monday
against Rlchnrd Drown to collect
an account assigned from Tliorne'i
grocery, Murtaugh.
Brown owes the grocery IKMUl,
according to . tho complaint. Tlie
barcau also seeks sU per cent In-
terest on Uie occount. J. H. Barnes
is lis atiornty.
Safe
Twelve year* 'of driving with-
out scratching a 'fender b the
record of Ral[}h W. Potter, ii,
driver "for the' Twin ralla..WelU
Stage Una. ..— j
— He-H8S-TO»lTo<! vi-ace .driyei-;
pin and certificate pr merit from
Markcl Hervirt, IncJ„ Ihtema-
tlonal insurers ot. buses and
trucks. PotUr completed tha Wth
year or his record Dec. 31.,
Estatels Decreed ;
-^ole-Beneficiary
The estate of tha lato 'Mrs. miy
Hunter has txen decreed sole bene-
ficiary of thO'estate of her late.hus-
band, William E. Hunter, who died
April 33. 1015.
Mrs. Hunter's. estate la now In the
procdss of being probated. Added to
It nom her husband's proper^ are
lou 3S and as in block. JO, and loU
seven and .eight and tho easS, oat-
half or lot six In bl<ick 20, all Filer
Wwnsite.
Surviving tho coupio ire 'Ihrto
ins and four daughters,- Mrs, Ha-
lel Perry, Mrs. Esther Repass. Mrs.
IJellls* Asliton, Mrs. Geneva' Brert-,
nan, Harold d. Huiiter, Wayna C.
Hunter and Jim Hunter.
Missionary Speaks-
HEVBURN. - Jan. . 30— A flrejldo
chat was held at the home ot Mr.
and . Mrt.-'WUllBm ■ CtaUUuium- son-
day evening. lor Junior. M-Men and
Junior Oleancr glrls^
Darwin Chrlatcnsen, Who recently
Jclumed-froOT an-l.ns- nitsa lo n - 1 n
Finland, spoke and showed slides
Hall Crowded
At Community
=GoncertHere
Carol," an 'Old English folk song:
"She's Like tho.Ewallow,'" a Ne*
Foundlond song, and a Spanish
song, ;'Ah-Che Blcn Aslbr Ssber
Yogl^."
For her encores Ulat Delia
sang a gay Italian song, "Colombot-.
ta;" o selection- from tho B^adway
p1nyjmo,Jtlntand_I..etitlUedj:Wo-
Kiss in the Shadows;"- Bliet'a "Open
Thy TleBrt;" a-brtef number, "Mis-
ter Banjo." In which sho whUtled,
and her dondudlng selection, "Th«
npiary." '
Selections ijy accomponlat Theo^
doro Schacfer were Chopldli' "Noc-
tuma"* and "toccata" by Pouleno.
As an encore ho played on early
IBth- century minuet, arranged 1^
Fremont. ■ . .
JStOME, Jim. a^-nUtet'tt'tntf,^
man. Baker, Or©-, ttftiiBm-.ti/1SiU}
IdohoOrcKon Bella CasTOlii
soclatlon, apoka to- memban ot ttw '
Klwanls tHUb at ttialc nfjlllu ~
ly.-meetlnc-* — -"
IWDEItaOE,*! TREATMENT
KIMDEM.Y. Jan. M-Mra. Ker-;.
mlt Hall, EuBene. Ote.. daughter ct
My. Ind Mrs. Roy Lattln la under-
going treatment In a cimio In Salt
Lake City. MrsT Hal! recently was
a pntlent at the Magle Valley Memo--
rial Iiospllal. /.
(
TIMES-NEWS, TWIN FALLS, IDAHO-
-TXIEStlAT
-A iauMlWallm nT Tib. It, Klj. of qm Idit
Mtabllih*d In 1101 BDd Iha Twin ¥t.»t Vm Ml
fublUbtd lUllr BDBdiJ ■! lit S*CSDd B
- liUM. b» On Tlmia-Km rDbtlihlDi Con
■ KmUnl u (Kand tlu* m&ll B>tUi A*)I> ■
atflw la -Twin -rail*, -IJaha, bbJw Ihr "
BRITAIN'S RECOVERY
Prime Minister Churchill for the most part
1105 left Britain's real problems out of hia
- (llscusalona with President Truman and other
American officials. Those difficulties are oco-
nomtc. and they ax© very sertous.
— The ' British- premier- did - exact- a" promise
from us of more steel, which will have a
definite bearing on ojio phase o(.the economic
crtsls, the njflterlala shortage. But that la only
part of the Story,
.^j-XheJundamental fact Is that Briuin's-once
, vast economic empire has shrunk alarmingly
and Is still contracting.
This has n inde Britain . ltacll-a..topTheBvy.
nation, overburdened with population and
the -administrative and flnanclal'structuMto"
Jit a level of. actlvitr that.no longcr-exlats—L-
,As parts of the empire have broken away,
too often they have carried with .them both
markets and raw materials sources relied on
by the Brltlah.
And.ln a world of rising prices Britain has
not be;en able to compete, successfully with
the United States and ebme .other nations for
materials. available elsewhere,'
-Unaliie to got the raw ituff of ■hlanufactur•
.«IlJ)rod^cta-ln--^uI^lclent^olume,-the-Brltlah■
.hay^e_not_befln_abla..to-sall;.e^ouBh-Bood8 to
pay for the foodstuffs the y need to fe ed their
substantial "population- ■
Bo the country la like a great factory which
Is trying to maintain- a full payroll of several
thousand workers with too few orders.
■ The original postwar ferltlah loan and sub-
sequent Marshall plan aid were like hypoder-
mic shots that temporarily restored-a flush
to Britain's cheeks. They apparently solved
nothing but simply postponed the 'day of
reckoning.
That day may now be close. Churchill
knows It will not be easy to ask an American
congreM foiuin^^ ga oei
The «dmlnlotrBtlon, frankly. Is UlclnE » deliberate
Btmble on the Kremlin. Wnihlnfiton hopea and expecU
ihnl Btnlln or his successor u'lll resirlcl their nn-
■Cresslon . to-JociU; Koroo^ll ke-ouit>raakxrknd-not marah-
InU) »aulhcut Asin, the mlddJe esst or western
Despite hetivy ftpproprlntlDns lor ovcraeoa forces,
there-hM-»l3o-becn-»-Bl£iw<lown-on-U)flfr-fKint-TJie-
budRct nsures do not meet the demanils allied epalces-
men ninde on us In recent conferences at Woshlnston.
ABSISTANCE— n)reliin asslstancB lor fiscal 1»3
will total I10JK»,000,000. of Which about 18,000,000,000
will be tor rearmlnE other nations. The comparative
sum for fiscal 1BS3 wa« taj)00,000,000 with about «S,-
000,000,000 going lor defense prcparnllons,
The two-yeiu-. total of (17,100,000,000, 15,400.000,000
mora than we advanced during four years' operation
of the Marshall plan, »ounds_lllt6::;«nd J»r-* lot of
TnijnB7raut~even that vast iniount will not go far,
ln._vlew~ of -the -cost'Of-modern-weapons -and-tho
number ot nations wo are financing. Few reallre the
global-extent-ot our-mtlltaiy-underwrlUngr "
ThB Uklted States now is' furnishing men, money,
weapons, materials and "technical assistance" to nine
member nations of the North AUantjc treaty orgoolu-
Uch, to Oroece and Turkey, Iran and Iraq, Indo-
china, Japan, Formosa, - the PhlUpplnts and Iho
United Nations forces In Korea.
We shall soon be paying the bill for armies tn
Japan and West Oermany, In addition, wc maintain
troops, air and naval bases and fleets In or nea
these distant areas. '
there islittle proof such aid brings any lasting
results. _
it-Brltatn-muatriIo"'la'I]rOadcn its eco-
nomic base until once more It approximates
the-well-establlshed super-3tructure-of fl-
■nance-and-admlnlBtratlon-that~ao^lonB"k6'pt
the nation' pn-emlnent among'lhe woria'a
.economlo.tfbwers. - .
■ Oifly-then will It be able to/lteep Its people
well fed and healthy withoiit the hrtlflcla!
stimulants of outside aid.
This la a taU order.' If Churchill can fill It
he may. make a peacetime mark groater-than
his wartime heroics. Evidently he under-
stands the problem well; but there Is no-slgn-
yet he sees how to solve it.
■ Without a solution, Britain will slide stead-
ily downhill from Its former greatness. Be-
fore It Is the brutal example of Austria, where
once-powerful Vienn a servca so small an
^F^^wenoml e~lilfitci'land"tllflt it almost seems a
city without a country.
- London-mlght ona day-be anather Vlenna
[^::WilM*j)roMnt-trend3-aro-aiTe5ted; — —
.And all free men must realize: A Britain
reduced to" secondary power would mean an
1- immeasurable lostf'of atrength to the forces
fighting Russian communism- The task of
safeguarding liberty would be Immensely
complicated. That Is the st a ke in B ritain's
--»enrch-Jor-pirmonerifc-recovery. ■ '■
EFFECTIVE ENFORCEMENT^EEDED"
„ St ron g local enfo r cement measures are.
belnrTfrgatnira^ie-oruic main citorts in the
-redubfl^he-toH-o.
accidents. This should and must include ac-
— tion against violations somctimcsjicgardcd-as.
~"" trlvial?'~c.crtainly- no offense Is . "minor':
heii it costs-u lift) tit Injytea someone and in"
the course of a year these so-called "minor"
violations of_traffle laws cpst hqndreds of
lives arid Injure ttiousands in, street and hlgh-
— way accidents.— ~ —
It makes sense to direct the greater part of
our enforcement effort against the more flag-
rant offenders— the speeders and the drinking
drivers who cause far more than half of the
fatal and serious accidents. But other" trafhc'
JaTCjTlolators-should-not-be-overlookedrbe--
cauae their contribution to tlvtsrlslyjccortl is
—jhJghctthan-most people'realize,' ■ ' '
- — Conslder.-f or lnstonce, the driver who falls '
to observe "a "stop" sign or to yield the right-:
of^yjYigjLngtllPrTrhlPlnfira podwtrlftn, "
^ath-ln-evcry -luraha 27 of "every lOOliTT
juries. In traffic accidents are caused by this
type of driver. Such offenses, regarded as
"minor" by millions of motorists, cost 2 BOO
lives and Injured 325,000 ot hers last year.
^'^^""^^t^i^S^tluns aityvcr-lheivl^
fJi~tlrlv e r ^- h a v g-4rlplcd-ttnd-thclr to i r ' or
Injured has multiplied 10 times In the last
two dccadesi . .
■ "Cutting In" caused"anbther'20O deaths and
30,000 -injurlcsm WSO.-RockleHS-drivinK cost
more, than 2,300 lives and injured over loo qoq
persons, while drivers who passed cars on "the
JCT511K_«ltlo_JclUed_noarlj!__l,DOO_-inore-and-
Injured over-100,000 persons.
These losses are colossal rather than "triv-
ial" and the police should treat drivers who
cause them accordingly. _A marked reduction
Jn lilghwoy casualties may be achieved If the
police make examples of all drivers who
Ignore the rules of common courtesy and
safety and let the .courts decide how serious
they were.
Lots of pedestrians .are simply car owners'
With tcen-nge children, .^i
TUCKER'S NATIONAL
WHIRLIGIG
WASHINaTON— Careful, conircsslonar study of
ihb. ISU Ilscal butltet convtncta captU)\ hUl Uuit
President Truraan hot compromlKd with political and
European-demand* that-hB-slo«-<Iown-the'antl-Rui-
iian -Tcarmani en l pnigram~PyoD « unwo - jears -h eiw ■
and abroad.
While the decision s^Ustles iciU-
" j Ittom loclnE election next Novem-
* - ber and our near-bankrupt allies,
,lt has caused grave mlsilvlng at the
Pentagon and amons their military
aasoclat«s abToad. As Prtiiitnt Tru-
man concedes, 11 will mean Russia.
-wUl-enJoy-mllltary- supremacy over
lhe„we<l_Ior_lhreci.or_four more.
ye*ra. possibly indefinitely.
. - Tbit U the second time since thi
«nd of World war n the White
House has faltered In the field of
Bir Txktr national security. Several years aso
Mr. Truman forced the icrapplnj ol the proposed
.wptr-altcraIt_c*nl«r,-,ihe-UnlWd-BHiUsr-Kt-ftl50-
blocked "unmothbelllng" of portions of the fleet.
More- Importantly, he Impounded and refused U
spend tSOO,000,000 cani[reA.i-bad appropriated to In-
crease the Alrforce from 4Q to TO wlns<< We now art
spendlnn money fe'verUhly and eitravngantly to make
up for both those decisions,
, Wftare striving for a maximum of iC wings; Be^
sides transferrlnir warships to active service, we arL
planning to buUd more carriers, subs, destroyers, etc.
-OABnJLE-^The-naUonardefenie"expendltures"prO'
posed by the White House ore sUBBerlntr enouBh, But
the rale of disbursement, the production and ex-
pansion^ schedule and the dellvciy of actual weapons.
In addition to normal bottlenecks, will b* for slower
than mlUtarr advisers had recommended In thelr
rrpilmlrtiify ii^u[<-fi
Pot hy.
Shots
VAGUENEBB— Ko nation In history has undertaken
such a costly and far-Teaching responsibility, not even
Brltoln In the days of the empire on which the
act. And yet, - In Truma n's . own wor ds. It
"■Te VcTar ^MFs^Wre "a'TraiSHn'IHVSloi^'or
western Europe and (sveraj fringe areas c»n be' re'
alstcd successfully. >
. After describing our effort to build an Iron ring
around the Soviet, the President snid: -
._."On the .basis of this new plan, two important con-
clusJonii_epicrKC JirBl,_ma_iioW_cIcaE-thiit^wllUin-
la more months western Europe can have a com.
pact force which would offer strong resistance In
event of an attAcki ■ — — ^
"Secondly, under, the new plan It Is now clear that
rithtn a few years It will be posslbto Co attain a level
of western Europcon defenses which would make
Invoslon so costly there, and sc unUkcly of success""
tha^ the danger of Its being attempted would be re.
It Is Mr. IVimiah's qualifications and the vagueness
ot his assurance o( European strength which dis-
quiet- th e ■ m mtory . ■ — - — — —
BURDEN— Although the 110.500,000,000 sum seems
large. It Is only the start. 6ur NATO allies Informed
Washington at the recent meetings that the United
-SUles must, carry alnroiL tlie vjhott mlUlnry bur-
den In ttie future. They said that they cannot spend
■^he-ameunto-feqiilr«<IfJJ4UtouiJ4ow«rll>ft-jlvin8 "3tnnd -
ards BO severely that antl-Amerlcon governments
might come.Ca.power. ond.moke-peacft wlth-stalln. —
As against the $70.000,000,000. jne are spending for
nlonwstiBTjirrorBltnTiereiaBTWJfyeaiTttfhWKA'W
members are sppUHlng only »0*)0,000,000, of which
Britain and France alone will account for about
»7X)qo,000,000,_^Yet_Uiey_cannot_c«ny that load^for
Il^wo^wivit thcnv to rtann, we must pay ttia
These stark financial consldeiatlona explain why
Mr. TYuman haa had to slow down. Even the U, S. can
do on ly-to much,
VIEWS OP OTHERS
Uimtlsfootory state. Aa It now-itonds, an-lndlvldual
ToiigB u not only ws soiroffiiisi^riiie guilt or Inr
nocenco of the accused, but can Impose any sentence
J^ilivou.t l!mlt,.Mflihcr.the.conylctlon nor^tho.fientenca
can be reviewed, altered or rescinded by a higher
JQiirf^
A few days ago the Globe and Mall was convicted ot
contempt of court In circumstances which again raise,
the Issue aa to whether the la^v^ in fringes .upon baslo
nghu which conalltulo tlie'foundatlon of democracy.
: -.The aet4on arose 'out of ah editorial' wlh'ch had ap-
peored In the Olobe and Mall quesUcning the ade-
quacy ofaentencca Imposed by another court on four
youths convicted ot a aex 'offense. The newapoper
urged that the sentences be" reviewed throuBh an ap-
peal by the crown. Mr. JusUco Wells, who heard the
contempt charge.. held- Ihnt thO-edltorlal'-ln qucsUon
prejudiced the case ot a youth who was on trial before
-him i-charged - wl ih - par 1 1 0 1 pa U on - In - thtf- of f ense -o f -
which the others had been convicted. . ,
■"'ABThiranglilSl'^SjmrtrSTieardHii- Btrittestatarcy. ■
both the public and-prcsj. being excluded., the prosa-
could neither report them nor be aware ot what trans-
pired at the trlBla..lf the Globe and Mall was wrong-
lentlnfr on the senti-nrfi Impninrt U...wam-^
■anyone-might- _ ... _
cumstancts. The serious feature Is that the news!
paper Is denied the right of appeal.- Thus a hlghe:l
court will have no opportunity to rule on the vital
quejllon of whether and to what extent freedom of
expression by the press should be restricted.— Toronto
J3lilllL£r- -
Iproclly measure for whjch It
iCMlon'lasfweck':
Altliough probably a good many members would
have liked to enncl a brand new truck bill tliey were
toruiddcn by the limllAtlona Imposed by the g overn .
[- -mrntlrcinimiirTeitlGfa"th^lr"atlcnCQn otTone'pointr
However nobody -can keep a legislator Irom Wlklng
and Clio session could have drngged on for daj'o,
to the Irritation of the whole stale.
It didn't. The necessary legislation was npproved
UiB tecond day ot the session with only two dis-
senting votes In each house. Considering nil the
lormalitles Uiat go with convening a IegUln,lure even
lor N one. item Job, ond the temptation ot many to
sound oft rcRordlcis of whether what tliey aay will
affect the , pending menaure the boya got through
and oul.ot- the cnpiml city In excellent time.
Peoplc_p,'on't_ahuiHIcr-eo-muclHlf-the7-hnve-to-l3e-
i icii back ngnlii ficfore the rcRUlar lOSj ae.islon with
lis evidence that H icglslaUve ecaalon can be brlcf.-
Uiaipo nroa Prestt. . .
sorrv lot, but , . .
Dear Pot Shots:
Mr. Farmer ot Jerome Is' unfair.
Just becauic he feeds six hen pheai.
ants and one cock he should not
assume that Is all the phei^anta In
.Idaho or even. Jerome county.
I get around Eouthern Idaho now
■nd-then.--I -havo-setn- numerous
flocks ot birds ranging from three
or four to 50 being fed by farmers
and state game department. After
all, the state game department Is
supposed to repre.icnt all the people
In Idaho.
i don't think all the thlnRs that
happen to Mr. Farmer should, b^
blamed on .the city guy.i. I will ad-
mit city people are a sorry lot. All
they live for Is to buy the farmer's
produce and stcal'hls asparagus that
grows along the road. It grows nil
over the' country and where It ct
from, Ood only knows.
Now you lake weeds. The city guy
ncvrr_Bleals any_ot them._Nelther
does the farmer. He doesn't cut
them before they go to seed. When
11 comes winter and his road drifts
1, It could'l hnve been Ihi
weed.-t In lilt fence row that caused
It. It mu^l have been the uselejS
highway dcpnrtm en r Anyft'ny. Ifa
tun knowing Mr. Farmer.
A Gunner
(Oopdln g)
_PUrS JFOR_KIDS.DEr-T.J
A reader hoa to gct.;rld ot three
-PUpa_on D_way_ o r_ ano Ifi er.-Theylre
" cross between on English pointer
Id a German shepherd. -You can
phone Cliff Melcalt. 1T3T-J.
BUT NO DINNYt
Dear Sir:
nlmal to which Ima Won-
dering refers appears to be a reptile
Tyronnosaurus, a species ot the
genus Dlnosaurla. (A comic cartoon
gives a poor description ot these
ropulcs).-rao not know ofiny'aji-
deat_repllle-lhat-rBsemhIes-"Dln-
Th e-TyrannosnOTU3 "IWed'andbe-
came extinct during the Mesozalc
era. Tills era's close come about
... ,000 years ago. This ftaa yet
Bome time before the advent ot
man. He won the "king of all rep-
tiles," belnit the most fearsome and
effective llcsh eating reptile ot all.
Small wonder Alley. Oola and "Dln-
ny" made themselves scarce.
Irrlnr Kocalek
- (Twin-Falls)
THIS IS OFFICIALI
Dear PoL SlioUi:
niose nnimalii you bc r in tlic Al-
■ley-oop-depnrninninifi-n" mix lure'
between the saber tooth tiger and
a whale.
Nkllre of Moo
(Duhli
Thfl'fir.-it l ouch" nf_wlntcr_usu[illy.
Homeowner.
:i the luel man, says Our
nATIIER FUZZLINO
Dear Pot Shots:
Can you lirlp? Think we should
ive more up and coming buslneu-
fnen In IJiin Palis.
.ItccenUy I tried to buy my-wife
k mink coat and also a high-priced
When asked how I, wanted to
pay-for-them,-I-told them by deficit-
spending. I
Tliey couldn't understand this.
Even my banker feigned Ignorance!
- ' ■ UpU Date
(Tv,ln PalUl
HOW THINGS APPEAR-EROM
PEGLER'S-ANGLE
KIANKPURT- The grand head-
quartern of the office ot public at'
fairs of the high commUalon foi
the gov.ernmcnt.of-OcniiJinyJjLea-
tabllohcd llrnily In the great nea
capltol at Bonn. This is the first
actual acknowl-
edged propaganda
bureau w e ever
have operated as
a department ot
government
There Is a
branch of thl«
bureau.' In- the I.
O. Parben build-
ing In Frankfurt. >
directed by Bob-
by Lochncr, a pre- _ ._
cocloua and brll- whi
— yo
American who has spent most ot
his life In Germany, being the
ot LouU Lochner. who served 30
years os A.i3ocialcd Press corres-
pondent In Berlin.
-Louis Lochner resigned Instead ot
ajtlng tor retirement, for which hi
would- hnve been eligible soon, be
cause he thought he had been given
a raw deal by Kent Cooper, the'
chlof_e)(Ecullvc._.CooDer_wrUe3'.Iove.
songs as an avocation, which belle
reputation with some of the
slaves.
Bobby Lochner was General Clay's
Interpreter "tHiring many-difflculC-
c ori f 1 1 e »e e a r -A nd - If- 4 t-could be aS'
lurned Chat he was politically, oli-
Jectlve he would seem to be on I deal
■mnrr-roniinoBmsiU nitn g~ the rcTs"
any reason wh y the J ob sh ould exist
at ill, ' "
I reason to assume he's po-
ll tlcnllT" a Bjec tlve"-'or—Ini(I[iItIveT
however, because this has been a
political administration from the
start. And a man In such a good Job.
with continuity ot employment at
high salary and perhaps even a ca-
reer at stake, Is almost certain to
be a member of the machine.
This machine ot this mllltaiv
government now Is transformed Into
a colontnl bureaucracy." This ay stem"
ot-kongaxoo-court^jnaklng upJts
own Iftwa aa Hltler^dld, and thlo ncff_
civil admlnlstraiioh under a high
commisslDner-w llli . a_c o 1 o nlal_cablr.
ct, are not American Institutions
1 the broad sense.
They never were from tJie day
Eisenhower pulled back his vlctor-
loun American fighting men from
the rich eastern German fattnlanda
they had- captured and abandoned
nil that treasure to Ituisla. This nct-
'oric ot institutions haa been and
remains a partisan [wlltlcal patron-
age machine, a patronage colony
planted tar from the eyes and nos-
trlb of the American people.
mojt advanUEe ot Uie carpetbag,
cers' scale ol prtvllegM. .
I will Inquire at Bonn where I
have been thus tar In attacking thi
reticence ot agents of the American
Pederotion ol Ubor,
Broa-n, David Dubinsky's ambosM-
As I reported from Paris. Irylng
^jr. repulsed my attempt u> ask him
about his credentials from the state
department.
■ Here In FrnnkfurU caught Hurry
RutB.' another such anibiwisador. In
the commotion of-packlng to move
to- another base. However, when I
asked him by phone whether he had
■er enjoyed the free occupancy ot
German home commandeered by
ir carpetbag forces. It aeemed to
...e I look-hlm.otf guard fot.hE. falt-
ered and sold he couldn't just re-
member but thought ho .probably
had.
I aLw asked whether he had en-
joyed the government sutuldy paid
by Americon taxpayers In the form
ot 13-cenl gasoline. He said he prob-
ably had been allowed this privilege
which was accorded to all the car-
petbaggers.
_ot_cQune,,they_ all. got..B. crack at
the finest American groceries at
rates, according to the system
-nlllng In .^Loodon, Paris and
other soft spots overseas, where the
operation ot grocery, candy stores
jind_mcalmarlccta..la_B_re8ular_dE-
partment ot the diplomatic service,
~ In-the- London naval headquar-
1 a lurge sUn Itivltei blueiockcts
ipll-'as-^ttloora-to-have-lhelr-
fhoM .ihliied free and the phrase,
"ybu-ncver-hnd-lt-ao-good,"- Is-be-
comlnc hl.ntorlc like "remember the
Alnmo-nml-I-dld-it-for-the-wJfo-
nnd kiddles." * .
Knowing the AFL had burrowed
deep Into the hide of the carpetbag
administration; like the" ticks which
are draining the vitality of our
American economy In Washington
and 10,000 other centers ot Infesta-
tion, J _osked Bobby Lochner n bout
Uielr dealings with his propaganda
bureau,
coume. the American papers' never
will publish." And the trulli of It Is
that Americon papers never will.
There la no legitimate excuse for
the existence ot an official Amerl-
m propaganda depa rtment e ve n as
Tnnency^r'a coTonlaToulpaitT
Tlie bureau of public affalra ot
tha hlfih commlwilon-rer-govemment
aJSa-ABT-LINB—
WlII jou bring my lunch up
lo the auto-tof line al iho-court--
OENTLEMA.'MS-THE^ ■cmllni!
. FOURTH BOW
In Germany is down for 110,000,000
in Truman's budget. Nobody can siiy
how much of this Is going to bo
spent to counteract the Russian
prop.iKnodii which Is untnvorable to
the United- States, -bub absolutely
true.
Much of this propaganda, l.i par-
ticularly xiIfeailvo-to-Hnrry-Truman-
ond Ills' parly, while to honest
Americans Uie ottcnic lies In the
facts ihcmsel'
— H*-tald'hU-otIlca-had-dIstrlbut«d
only two documents supplied by the
AFW one - » - fit aphid - map -purportlnff
Eliow the- location of slave camps
In nujsia, the other a pamphlet
condemning the Russian version ot
-.ilonlim as a farce and fraud ruled
by the Kremlin .and extolling the
American' version oa a free associa-
tion ot workers for common benefit.
Rather vehemently I put it to
Lochner (hat this document Was n
lalse repitaenUilon Intended to con-
ceal trom the workers ot Germany
nnd Iron curtain countries the fact
that the AFL has been a haven
in operating base tor many ot
•orst u nderworld rac l reteers_q f
TUniiit~50*ycn?i: r
I added that the unlod bosses ex-
torted hundreds at mlltlona from
the workers tor licenses lo woric on
patriotic war projects.
Additional countless millions have
■p ri retorted, trom ^.(;orpo rations
.ind from the taxpayers who have
ultimately pald..iuch costs.
: — Loehn cr~abvioii.iiy~kn e w^alniosT
no facts nbout unionism In tbo
United Slates, but said Uiat even bo,
these tacts would pre.ient n negative
picture to those workers to whom
Fined
BURLEV, Jan. lO^'Andrew Peter-
son, Burley, .-pleaded guilty to a
charge of . tnloxieaUon .Afondny
morning and was fined ISO by Pro-
bato judge Henry W, Tucker,
Peterson wu arrested by aiaU
Patrolman Marvin Snyder who said
-hff-found-P*ur*on_unamscloui in
hH-«u tomobllc-which- was -parked
beside the highway.
Party Is Held f or
Polio Fund Drive
KING HILL, Jan. aS— A March ot
Dimes square dance and_bax_aoclaL
was held -Friday night at the King
Hill school. Mrs. John Baptle, Mrs.
Tom Nlchob and Russ McMillan
were In charge.
Lunch boxes were auctioned by
Wendell Allison, Leo Trlpple -and
Bill Moats, all Olenns F^rry. and
Allen -GUbcrl._Klni-HIlL.The.dancc
and social netted t202£Q. . .
Callers were Trlpple, Gilbert, Al-
lison, BUI Walker and Mro. Karl
Comahan. Mn. H. O. Llpe and Mrs.
Terrell Foster Ot the Grange home
economics committee served cot-
tee.
Events Reported
OABTixFOUD, Jan.- 00— Mr. -and
Mrs. Rankin Rutherford have re-
ceived word that their son, Ptc.
Wayne _Ruthcr(ord,,. Is In. the. hos-
pital on Oovemor'a Island In New
York recovering trom major sur-
gery. -,
William Jergeiuen, Richmond/
Calif- Is vislUng hb alster. Mrs,
W. n._Ha«Bht. and.Iamlly, . . ___
Alma Wheeler has returned home
from Tucson, Arle., where she visit-
ed" Marle.'auerry' at'tho University
of Arlrona.
these appeals are addressed by the
official agency ot the carpetbag
government at taxpayers expense.
^ Given by 0
Chlct smluTVi
trlbuied
CUllCd I
llelpatiiK,
Monday b; tmj V
cniiters htrt
-Harold WilU.;n-p
Of Mrs. Huxtnl pL,
■f"j; tnlUKd^
Lackland-ilr loJ^S
tonlo, Tex.. lor hlj ti»
-Walter-D.-HoLU.^
nvenuB«ut,tTduTrt^J
■/n-lhe-.srrniriiiifiiJM
and Mrs. Emai Ra-1
Following his t<^M
pou[tla.v uuh. hr»jl
Lewis, Wssh. ■
Do We Have to I
Tttlrty-nlne years ago In forbidden Tibet, behind ththldal
ttn-w-a young-Joumallst-named Edwln'J.'DInjlB i^ij
to-thls quesUon.-A-great-m:^tlc-opened his cytj.-A*titii
overhltn. He reallied-the strange power that kaowIei[t ^fi^l
That Power, he eay», can translorm tlie lite ot snyont ftM
ever they are, can be answered. The problems of tiMWita
and wrong, can be solved.
i In hDrown case, he fl/fca brouBht 6ack"to"ipltnai(l hailil
wealth, too, ax well as world -wide protculonnl nc«fn3biL
years ago. ho was sick as a man could be and live. Oxtbl
bought Years ol almost contlnuoufl..troplcaLfei'en..l(;ialI
blindness, privation and clanger had made a hdhiiQ vitctdM
cally and mentally. ' ^
He was about to be sent. back, home lo die, vhra 1 1:
come — 'They are walling for you in Tibet," He winii w
world what he learned there under the guidance ot tlu xa-.
ever encountered during his 31 years of travel Uinmibsea,
wants eveo'one to experience the greater health lodi^ hi
there came to him..
.Wltltln ten years, he was able to retire to tbls'comtmfil
He had been honored b:; fellowships In the world's loi^if
societies, for hl5-work as a geographer. And (odiy, n pall
BtiU so athletic, capable of so much work, lo yoiuif la q
hard to believe he has lived so iqng.
» first step In-lhelr progress-toward (he-Ponraiil
Mr.-Dlnglo-wanlo-to-Bend-to-rcBders-c niHin^l ■
treatise. He says the time Is here for it to be rtlciicdtilT
-Worid^aad- otiers-to-wnd-l t-f rce-o f-co3t-m~obl IntteiirKtf
of ihb notice, ror your free copy, address jThs ImUtuttjfM
313 South Hobart Blvd.. DeparL C-23S; Los "Angelu A a
urged to write'promptly as only a limited number df tS '
been printed,— Adv.
WEDNESDA
Frankfurt prior to hh lranster_(o
Bonn. ■HIS rahk'ln the bureaucracy
entitled him to have eight German
Dieting WEED NOT
L Member
Icbnducted
l|A Meeting
V- ni observed at llic
Ui tTtnlng. Tiie apecUI
"y(]d 11 pnnel dlicus-
\ C«lvln Helnir. «■
fiiii Mra. Jumea Wll-
l-Qni Given
PH, J»n. 30
£'iu In cliariie ol Uie
■ihrwscs; mfeUng-Bt
; church, HosMasei
. H. D»nl(^. MTJ. R0I3-
Mn, Burley.' talked W
e-a Cub ScouUns.
I UintiBll annul
nd ho; dinner will be
il the church. Dinner
evtewed"
Events Reported
%.-^T-FrChQpter
Of Moose Women
I'r^^if^l^Sundi.y. Amcrlcn
fhim ^"'l" "^i^d .I*ocMtllo
cnipters «cre- represented.
AIM. Ktiiie- -Soper, Tu'ln Falla,
Alberta lleditrom. Poc»iello. chwr-
|n«n, Mrs. Ann Loveltnd. Poci-
teiio. deputy srand reBeni. In
ehnrKc or ceremonies.
•OpenmirTFHice «m conducie"d
oy ^e Poc«irlio chapter. MrJf. EN*
PwklnMn. Pocnidlo. Rave Iho wel-
come-siiareM nnd Mri. Marie Chap-
m«n. Tuln Palli, the reaponie. Bal-
lotlnE Wis directed by Pocntollo
memberj «nd the T»-ln PalU ehap-
tcr conduciM-liiitlatJDu. rrrrr
--Mri, Loipinnd lalKed on tHe Col-
ICKC-DLlKCUlmdmlnlitraUvc lund
ana the American Falls chapter
conducttd the Mooseheart endow-
ment fund march. The cloalnB cere-
monj- wn, Jm by Twin rails mem-
t)t:raJ.miclicoii-v.dK-ofrv«<l-by-llni
Pocalclln chapter,
■Oilier local W0111CII ntiendlmt Uie
conference ttcro Mri. imoBcno
BJorlt. Mri. Kotherlne Lonji. Mra,
-Clartbelteionapniftn " Mitl"Mi»,"Ji5ary
KllMnser. "
■ Mr». Kmc Harker, child care
cliiilminn of -ra'ln Fills diapter.
Women ot the Moo.ie/wftfl In cliantc-
01 Uie chapter nlBhi-profiram Frl-
dny in Uic Moose hall, aohss and
dnnce.i ftcrc presented by Oic Tulip
Blue JJird-Rroupi-BponMirfd-Uj'- the
lodBc and led hy -Mrs, Elolsc Carl.
TIMES-NEWS. TWIN FAtLS. IDAHO
PA6K]
.Gold-ond Green
Balls Scheduled
OAKLEY.— Jan, 2J-Tlie Cawla
LDS atake Gold and Qreen ball hsji
been scheduled Tor 9 pjn, Saturday
at the Rainbow ha'.l.The event, iho
"letne of < chlr>^ U "it urri utl^ ^[\\
fealiuy ft floor ahov directed by
Mrs. MetiUL. Wivti.. MIA tcUvlty
counselor. Oanee directory will be
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Woodhntoc.
Bee Hive girls and Boy Scoui.iwui
-old.ihe leen-aee Gold and Giecn
wl at 7:30 p.m, Monday it .the
Rainbow hall, a floor ahow will be
presented.
Kprmii! Initiation, ccremonlca
conducted fq r Mrf. Mary Htlm-
plircyj, A quilt made by membera
ol Uie Dluc Bird Rroup wna . prc-
aenied to the chapter lb be sent to
children of Mooseheart, Mr,v Nellie
Sopcr received the while elephant
and Mra, Mabel HolmEren. the mys-
tery box. Members or the Loyal
,Order;o( Moose served a luncheon,
* V *
Luncheon Held-
Twin-Falis Man, —
Miss Pesce Wed
^rn~Evening^Rites
A candlcliEht ceremony performed
Saturday cvenlns In (he Immanuel
Lutheran church. Twin mils, united
In marrlase Betty Pesce, Richland,
Wnah.. dnURhter of Mr. nnd Mrs.
Frank Pesce, Roalyn. Wash., nnd Ar-
-!Mri,-Wllllam-Kevan-wn3-elected
"".d lni^i'led prMldcni_ot_Hio_ Em- ,
wion c\ab at the annual luncheon
Friday at the home of Mra. E, M.
DosMii.
OUicr new officers are Mrs. Ber-
nlce Hill, vice president; Mrc. Loa-
He Jonti, lecreinry, and Mra, War-
ren Wllllama,-trcamrer,-Mrs. O. W.
Kevan "was InstflUlne, officer.
The Broup_ voted Jo hold the
Calendar
TliB ChrLitlnn Women's Fellow-
Pinochle Played-
MiLNEK. Jan,- »-Mrj, JMiuon
Spann and Mrs, Charles Stephen-
son, ir., enteruined at a party in'
honor ol Jaeltson Bpann at thr
"5t« pheiiJion— home.— Out- Dt-commu
nlt>' |uc?w were Mr. and Mrs. J, D,
HUlman. T»ln Falls, and Mr. aiid
Mm, Robert Harney, Rupert.
Pinochle hish prlies went to Mrs,
.lUlph Hendricks and Dob Kloer.
Low prfies were received by Mrs,
tvdwln-Brunc~nna-Bm-Drn(!.iimw,
Mra. Charles Stephenson. Jr., won
the travellnK prlie. ,
Jackson Spann will report to the
USS Princeton, Bremerton, Wn '
* —
Order Meets
Twin Falls bethel No, ID, Order o(
Job'3 DauBlilcr*, held a rosular mo-
slon Monday evenins In the Mnionlc
temple with the honored queen.
Belle Hall, presiding. Plans wre
made lor the liiltln iloa c crcninnv tii
"txlituriirthc next mcetlnB feb. II,
All officers and choir members
Job's Daughters;^
Of Jerome .Plan
Special Sessions
JEROME,-J«n^-*9 IntUaHon
ceremonies, will be ptrtoimed for
Tiiviireftnaia»tei"Tot^6i)'nnuBh-v
ters when Mrs. Harriet Miller, Brand
Riiardlan-ol Idaho, makea-har ot-
fielal.vUlt.Fcb, 1*. - ^ ...
Candldatn Include Ann Shirley,
Carol Dushi Kay 'Rowlands, Ruth
Tankcraley, Mnniarel Rowlei, Mari-
lyn WIswbII and Joan WalUngton,
The ceremony will be held at 1:30
p, m, at-the MaM)nla-t«niple-and
win be preceded by a banquet at
Wood's cafe nl'S p. m, JoAnn Rlg-
ney. honored queen, will preside. A
proRrnm - IK planned and the drill
team will peMorm during the meet-
Ins.
During the afternoon, Mn. Ulllei
will- be-hoiiored-n t-a-Ua-alMn-b!
Miss RlRney at Uig home ot-Mrs.
Anton Hof. Officers oUob'a DaQBh- -
ters and their' mothers will be
Buests,
To raLie funds for the purchase
of a Job's DauBhteri flag, memberr
win hold- B candy sale Saturday. —
Tlic honored queen has announced
that ihc-tcnm led by Lois Clear won
the recent contest to obtain funds
for the Seeing Eit dog project. The
losluiC- t«Mtt-le(t hy-Oatolyit-Vlnnat
wni honor members of the winning
team nt a party In the near future.
* » ' »
^-■Resident Feted^
Marvin Helnrlch was honored Sat-
urday nt a surprise, birthday party.
Pinochle prUes were received by
JiUa,_EauL .Cnriion.and- J eiac_C arl,
ton, hlch; Oscar Dash nnd Sandv
Jqhn.snn.Jnw.^and^Mra, ..Carlton,
traveling, Mrs, Helnrlch served le-
freshmentn. -
(3are of Your Children
By ANGELO PATRl
"My nitle son. 7'.i. Inalsta upon my
feedlnB him his momlne cereal al-
thouEh he eats his lunch nnd dinner
wli]ip»i_mucIi_hcln,_Hc_eaU_dc-
llbcrnlcly while T feed him spoon-
fulo.-I-caii-Bcnrcely-opnro-llie-iliiio
_thli_taku.ouL.ol. my-marnlnis but
It 1 tell him. niter giving him n
couple of spoonfuls, thatr'he can bo
ahtod now nnd eat while l lldy Ihe
room, he scrcamd nnd kicka like mad
and. I hnvc to feed him. How, long
Is thia phase of BrowUi to continue?
When can I expect relief?
-Thla la no phase of srowth but
a way the child has discovered to
holdhlsmother'a(itlcrtlonll:<edon
him. It will conltmio ns long as hd
can make it do so. It will cease only
when hia mother, ceases to bIvc In
to hIa demands. He gets n great deal
of satisfaction out of the situation,
and OS long as he can gnln that feel-
ing he win fiRht to obUIn It,
After feeding him n couple of
-BpoMifuisrl tr-mHthfr-be - wc l l-forThl.T
mother to lay, "How you ro on nnd
cot two' apoonf ula," Dr,eak the end
nowi to him gradufllly, "See how
many.apoonfula you can cat while
I tidy the room," Then. "I see you
j;n n_ h e !p . y ou r,Te 1 f . 1 1 it e_n_blK _ boy . .I'm
coins 'bn-wlth.my-wark-nnd_you.ci^ .
cereal. Let him ro wlthouL It won't
hurt him to skip a couple of break-
fasts. He will continue to try out
Ills Idea, but. .when. It brings him
nothhiR b>tt n session In a root
.Itlnuolti-he - soon - w 1 1 ve ■ up,—
Hla-mothcr'a alUtude.li-wbnUwlU
settle the matter one way or
nnoiher.~ir'aho l! nfmld-to let-hlm-
CO . without brcokfaal, afraid to
Isolate him Uhough the keeps
wntchl, if she cannot bear to-aee
and hear him howl, he wni know it
and prolong hla efforts. All doubt
nnd fc^r must be hidden as much as
possible and a firm front presented
to-tho-ballllnR-younisl«r.- If his
mother win realise that ahe is
bnttllng for his best Interest aa weh
na her own she win do thU' belUr.'
It Is no kindness to a child to rear
him In dependence on other people,
or In selfishness In relation to
others. Such a habit win only re-
sult In crippling the child's per-
■wmaHtyr-Onl y niruuiUul nntHnme;
a givliii; nttltiide. will create a
happy, f ri e ad ly i-«»tftet I ve-per aon '
nllty, n nucces.sful human being,
Ench child differs from another ai
each mother dlltera from enolher
.but _oomc_fluch..wny_ of. -teaching- a
.clillil_to_cijopcrate_wllh-olhera_ffni
shorten itio period of attempted
domination.
Betrothed
Youth Fellowship
Conference Held
In Filer Church
PILER. Jan. att-The- Methodist
"ToutlrlenawBhlii— atraict—jMsetlnj
waa l)eld Sunday In the Filer Meth-
odlat chxirch with the Tiler Brmip
jmd couoselora, Mr, and Mra. Dale
Williams, as hosts,'
Twin Palls members were in
charge of devotions, A recreation
period In the high achool n-nma-
alum preceded a Ulk on Nlierla by
Roeemary-Molder. HanMn." '-^ —
About 130 peraon.1 attended tho
banquet prepared by Mrs. Floyd
Sharp, Mrs.. Loren Drake. Mrs.
Wada Sharp, -Mra.- Luther - Fierce,
Mrs, Clarence Peterson, Mn, L. W.
Hawklna. Mti, Max Dwyer, Mn.
Donald Clay, Mra. W. W. Edwards,
*' -indaW.
Kimberly Coupls'
Engaged to Wed
KUIBERLY. Jan, 30— Mr, and
Mt»_Ed'prln^_aiU, Klmbetlr.— an-
noimce the engaaemcnt ol Itieir
dnuRhler, Mary Lou. to Kenneth D,
□ Ivciu. jion ol Mrs. Rachel Given*,
bL-o Klmbcrly.
Ilotti are era dun tes of Klmbcrly
high achool, Mlu Gill attended the
CollcRC of Idaho at Coldwen, where
■he vaa affiliated with the Ring
jiororltv^She.U, a-atudcnt .at- T wli^
PnlLs Business colleB<
i-Ckcn»*cr\'ed In -World -war-Il for
years, attended Southirmda-
and In now wlUi tho D. 5. navy
aboard the USS Princeton,
No definite date ha.^ been ael tor
the wedding.
Colonists nt Jnmestown, Va,. made
crude glass aoon after they landed
In 1607 because of lu value In trad-
ing wltti the Indians,
Sto p s I^a xatives
.regains^oathfnL-regnliirlty'
"For thirty years. I took so maw
kinds of pills and laxatives to To-
lleve CO ns tip n lion. Since I started
eatlns all-drak every day. thoso
troubles ara over," aayi buiy
Bclhnny, Ma., woman. If you. too,
.sutler. Iiom .irrcsularltr . . due .la .
lack of dietary buUc, try toasty
all-dhah. It's helped thottannds to
regain youthful rcgulnrlty. Rich
In Iron, hIsh In cereal protehi,
provides euentlnl D and'D vita-
rains. Not hnblt-formlng. It's the
only type ready-to-eat cereal that
supplies oil the bulk you may
-needrEnnrcnpTnfcryTHiTntrtmr'
plenty of liqu ids. 11 you're not
'.cojftpfc;ttrltfJfff^a/lcLi of Let' KHl ays, .
■end empty carton to KellogR'a.
Battle Creek, Mioh,. ond get
DOUDLE TOna MOMXT BACXt '
Tours Featured^
By Syringa Unit . J
HEYBDIlN, Jan. 3»— Ibfl BJTbV*'
club Friday toured the civil uio- ,
nauUca admlnlatrtUon amce''..lit._!
Olenda Peterson waa toaatmla-
treaa. The proEram Included a vocal
duet by Joan Wllllamion and Bee
WOQiJi, accompanied bv Mrs. B, L.
Williamson; a pnntwnlihe by" BUly
Joe Carter; an accordion sold by
Lynn Ha%h; readlnga .by Norma
Jean Hawklna and Ted Oltner and
an adrtreai. -What la a Mliilon-
ary?''-by-the-Rev. Qliirlea- Euley;
Buhl,
The n«v, MarUndalo Woods
ahowed colored atldes sent to him
William Brewer, nctlui «Uaf olr*
cratt comtnunlca,toc
The nroup also tqureijiidlo «U-
tlon KBIO iTlth Manascr Kor
Olark In charsp.
later In the afternoon rasmbotl "
returned to the home of MTa>''W. P. -
BoyH, «her« relreshmant* mn
nerved and'a biuinei* meetmc^wu"
held, each member, donating .toiba.—
polio drive.
♦ ■ : _„
Supper Held -
OAa'ITJ srORD. Jan> ao — Thft^ ,
minumniige eiub memoen enter- ■.
talned their husballds at a' potluck
aupper and card party Friday nlBht
at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Maurlo*
Ouerry. Mra, Roy PetUJotm and
Mra. Dallas Cox aislst«d Un.
Quetry. .
Prlrea were awarded to Mrs, Fred '
Rlngert, Glenn HIU. Mrs. Clinton
qulgtey -, and Chester McClaln.,
Guest* were Mr, and Mra. Qulglar
and.Mri.F»U4Lucaa.
PHONE 456 — PAY LATER
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TOO
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Woman'a Home Companion
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American Masailne
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3JK>
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Colller'a
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IM
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Saturday Evening Poat
10.00
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34
Better Homea Gardens
BAO
1,00
Holiday
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Ladles* Home Journal '
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34 —
□ oMTlBiLwkt epin (■' "■ ""
~4no~
_CoimopoUtnn '
uo
. tin
SPECrAL CLUB^ OFFBR-
14 Monthi of Col1Ian,"Ainirieoii_"
and-Woman't Homs Companion, juit
.00
FOR NEW SUBSCRIBERS ONLY .....
.,you-Pay |l,»-Tou Bate |L*»-
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FtlONE 4SS OB MAIL xniB QUICK ACTIOK COUFON
J.'^HILL, Sub scription Service
fs Ployed ■
■inntlona were fea-
|S Pinochle club card
il-thirhomc-of-Mrs.
Prizes were re-
I B. L. RelM, high;
■Iluier. second high:
■r»n, travel In B. and
1. loft". The group's
"'^uitiii-' ■■
j.-Amr Moral
Henry Kniep. Twin PnlLi. The Rev
R. C, Muhly rend the marriage vowa
before a pink and white floral
background.
The bride's gown was fashioned
wlth.n full-length .whltc_nct
.•LaUn.aklrl_A_nct.j'okc- accen ted _ the-
f I tied bodice of Imported French
'hlch wns Myled with long
ilccvcs. K pfMl llaia held hti
Rcrtlp-vell- of net nnd-nhe carried-
red roaea.
Mrs, Oeorge Mntaya,''6enttlc,
tcr of the bride, wm ma tron of
honor,— Bridesmaids were anolHer
slater, Mr«. Angelo Rovetto, alio
Seattle, and Cacenn Cox. Richland.
Wash.
Kenneth— Knlep-served— as— best
an for his brothtr nnd ushers
ere Merlin KnIep, Buhl, another
brother^ nri'd' DoWftld-Rehwali.
Jerome.
Music wna furnished by the choir
- wnilnm ■-
' ^ 'HTtmr ' inr T i nieyCTf ispinrehtircif
will give a dinner nt 7 pjn, Wednes-
day In the church honorUiK the
younB people of the church durlnfi
youth week. All members and
friends are Invited to nttend nnd
requMted-to-brlng their- own- table
^jf. 1/. ^^
l"~A"ctivTttes:Set
Work lor tile co'imnE"year
outlined at the Monday morning
meeting of group No. 5, Preabylflrinn
-Women's - ouocln tlon,~Mra,-Ooorfle
Brown, lender, was hoste.'m nt the
builnesa a'esalon and coffee hour.
r. O. Bex 76, Twtn Falla, Uah*
"TonrNamB'anil'Addrv
! Will both
with yovirs, Tlien
go out to shop."
— TmmtitrtimeniemciiLmhis-ue-
win yell and kick, according -to. pat-
tern. Warn him that It la not Rolng-
to Work. He wni keep on trying. Re-
move him to n quiet room and slutt
the'door,~As-tt-iisunl thlnR~hE-wiir
soon stop and oak to come ouL Let
him out but don't offer him his
Special PUREX
pn Martin
— Ftjr"ncr~dnuRhtcrt*wcd din g - M rs,
Pcicc- chO;ie n"(truy~nfteriiooh'3rc!ia
' 'llh blnclc nccc.isorle.i nnd Mrs.
Knicp wore nn nqua aftenioon dress
lattern
With bJnck ncccssoriea. uoih wore
coranges of gardenias,
A reception for weddinz euesta
loUowed in tho Park hoUl dining
lom. V-
Pollowlns a wedding 'trip, the
couple win be at home at Richland.
Wash., where tho bridegroom la em-
■p!oyed,-rttf-traveltt2-the-nt*-Mi*
Knlep chose a maroon and gray
eult with block accessories.
Tho bride attended schooLi In Cla
Elum. Wnsh,. nnd her huabnnd at-
tend cd-cttjvcniaiDolsr^^ ~
'The bride wns honored Friday
I'rty- givrn 1
-Dii^ner-Held-
Mr, nnd Mrs, C, R, Wilcox were
hosts Saturday night to membera
of a newljf- organized. plnochl5_aup-L
per- cltilS--Oucats--iit~tne potluek
dinner and party wore Mr, nnd Mra,
E, C. DegenhardL Noimnn ,McIn-
to.ih- wn»^honored with a birthday
cake. ,
Mr. nnd Mrs. Edwin Bnrker re-
ceived high. prlEC.nnd.Mr.-niid .Mrs,
Mclntoah. low. The next meeilr-
■!!l-b!iL.hcld J'eb^is.
■"'_.„*_* ^
" 1 rfsfa i I'tieaders
Mra. J. O, McVey was Inatnlled
president of the F7>I club, at
'"lirhtmi n^-'i"[t pr'-^'v----'"'-'"
Emma Balsch; Other new le ade rs
IVe Mra. Zelln B!ce, vice prcirdelir
■nd Mrs Nellie OrlgRS, aecretarj'
treasurer.
The group voted a donation to tho
polio fund and made plnn^ to lie
two qunts'for needy fnmines.
^fluiy .beauty o-
"•'"'■ner; depend
number.
rniufWHwie
RlDECdNfML
in-fhe
'52fORP
^RRBIir makes numkm
Stdrloc'/rmilk - tap-quality, pojleurlted f"
with only Ihe water and tatukcn out. I. _ .. _
Thifi ivhy Surlac makes auch wonderfully J Every quirt of Starlac gives you Ae iime -
wholesome nonfat miU: when you put back j ' amount of Ihcio body-building nulfienis ai
'the-waten-Just mix-in-s-mlnute, a(Mi-cbi!L --|'---yo u g el i n re g ular
Thafi why Starlac ii lo perfect for drink-
Ing. f nnltine. w.hippjng^
Realize alt the tiouriihing. goodness you g^t J"
in every quart of Slarlnc! Then ihthfc of its j
unbelievably low, low price— only 8/ a quart. |
So, get Suirlac at your grocer's ipday— and |
use it every day! ' . ' j
If lfs BORDlH'i-irs aOTJO BE- OOOD
FAGB SIX
"TIMES-NEWS; TWIN FALLS, rOMCT
Br BOB OILLIAH
Tbo problom of TunnlnE k n
^ — iBasQS xUib grow moro - compl BX. tliP
— luitj'jou BtudytJacinc — " ^
Talce, fcr liutuce, tlta €x1X the
UadQ TaUcT-OoitborB htvo peadins
wlto Mbw CmUb,
pa., » former^
dBvcluid Indian
fann club that
auspcuided opera-
tlons becaiuo of a
-Ulavltlon plnoli. -
^Cleveland, hai.
-flven tho Cow-
boys an oppor-
tunll]' Co purclioso
aoven of tho Now .;
OaiUe men. New |i
Caallo waa a clau
prlcB taci natuiallj t.'tt more than
daiu C nllotmcnCd.
Tho Co^iboya cftn purchnao tho
- whole lot for IIJOO. ThU Is quite a
bargain ilnce Cleveland said It would
__I)urchaM Juat threo^ of _them_boelc_
""at "thB end or~Uie aeason for tl,-
soo.
One of the men, k NcRro Itmt
basctnan, U deacrlbcd by Lnddlo
Placafc- chief— Cleveland ■ scout, - a*
definite major league tlmbei'.
" If the Dowboya alsn the seven,
another |I,100 at least will have t"
be spent to set the men to iprlni:
tralnins at HCBldiburgrCnllf. A cluU
has to pay-a-playor'H Dxpamu. to
■prlnS tralnlns and nil of tho seven
live on the crust coast.
To solve this problem, Clevelnnd
— Iineo-Up'alocQtlon'Ih Tcxna rdr'ttie"
Cowboys to train at to cut down
tho - cxpenao - of-brlnglnifm cir-Irtm) "
the enst. ^
sounds -JoffJcal,-buMhe-Coir^
boys will have about half of thdr
team provided by tho Ban Fran-
Cisco Scats who have west const
men. It would bo cheaper In Uie
Ions run to pay the high tranoporta-
tlon. costs for- cost coast men and
tako advantage ol the low cost ol
len already UvIur In Calltomln.
Tbe problems, don't end there.
. Hibso players have.bccn.playJnt.ln
dosg A ball, receiving clas s A
■alarles, wKIch are morcuian a UtllB
_hlehar_Uifla_waaeiLjinld_clnM_0.
,_Biea. . - . ■ — .-
Hov. will the Cowboys slsA the
•even men and- still stay within
the Pioneer letfsue'a «a]Bi7 limit?
Boren class A plajen In & class 0
league should mean a pennant
■ tcndcTi. but_liow_wlll_the_Cowlioyfl
do it? '
That's a problem president QUI
~'WUHnnan-^and,~Buslnesi " Manneer
Joe Clements are trying to solve.
If they do, the Cowboys should
Itave enough veterans to go with the
youngsters that will be ncnf here'
by Ban Francisco.
Twin Fall$ Seeks_
WiirOverG(5odiii^
May Sign With Walcott
In Battle Tonight
■ Th« Twin Falls Bruins h'ope to make amenda for their poor
flhowinfir Saturday nijiht againat Pocatello^and bounce back
with a win over the Gooding Scnatora hcrc""tonight. And, the
Bruins will have to be at their best to get past the hustling
Senqtora. Nine other conteata ~ '
Born e where along tha line In
_ ipatrTJoarmiosRD'RoTinhF'sfi _
ahone-Areo basketball game Satur-
got mined u p, accord In a
~<Oslyn, unosltoni
who writes:
•■I reel Ifs only right that I let
70U know that the scores by quarters
you printed on the Butte'Shoehone
Kama wers Just In reverse of what,
happened. Qutte ot Arco got olf
" -antefy'gtfbJTila-rt-Btfdlcd-Bhov
_ .)Il«*untira'mlnul«'"an"a^li~"
to go when we tied the score at
aU. .Wa fought tha UIlllUI.batU^ not
Butt«. Butte has a good team and
m were lucky to catch them at all."
TVs only nUMT&l that Shoshone
would want this corrected. ' The
Indians have been the hard -luck
■tOinrortftflieaiOtt'lhTlBBlcTralleSr
They have lost aevcn games this
■aaoon by one-basket margins. In.
eluding one when a Shoshone player
•ccldentally tossed the baU In the
other team's basket for two points
■Plaj^
In Its last few games.
HastTtnan li backed hcavUy to
•do wn-OoodIng-6 to Ut^ai— th»d lug r
Hagennan rates among' the better
squads In the valley, while tlie ned-
sklns are havlng-a tough-tlma-thls
season landing In the win column.
Corey plays at Bliss and a high-
scoring contest Is expecteil. Corey
a— atron g-f I rs t— five— that— has^
Bcorett-niRti" point" tallies "In ai:
gomes. Bliss has a small, but scrap-
py *team_that_coultt.inako_anJnter.
estlng gams tor the favored visi-
tors.
BeUtrvue plays at Ceclo in a con-
test rated as o toss-up. Bellcvue has
a stro ng first t eam , but'Dec lo_np:
pears to have Uie edge in rtservcs.
After play Ins Qoodlng here to-
night Twin Palis prepares for a
two-day road trip Into tho Bolso,
valley this week-end. taking on
Caldwell Friday and Mainpn Sntur-
Red dish Gets
New Boots to
Bolster Hopes
I
""boots and thereby becomes once
— moro-tho-TnBin-oiynipl(nioia~dr
tho American ski team. .
Reddish, team .captain and
Rgardod as the United SUtes' best
__botlg_t!in_QjjQ_gainea,_hoa— been.
"Tiaving a dismal time during tho
-Qlj-mplc squad's pra-ciymplc racing
to»it-of-Burope7-
Jiiok could not win In Swlticrlnnd
- or -ln-AuaiH8.-HB- could --not ■ come
«ven close. And on one could flgui«
Tho Salt Lake city prido was
fourth In i;ia"aIa!om- In-the -world -
.championship -at -Aspen;- Colo,i-lr
lOU) and had made a highly rc-
-ipectable showing In the lOtS Olyin-
pic games.
So his recent performances were,
naturally, a big disappointment.
But here. In 6L Anton, where tha
tf. S, ski team has sctUed for the
— final- two -weeks of pre-Oljmplo
training, the truth camo out.
J ack- was — vtn g— feot— tr OUNsr
- aimpla^aa-lhat. - . — .— .. --
"Ho has peculiar feet. They'ro long
and nar«w-"jii!itjklnjJid-bonts:
rbOlBcrnicrrtlWm.- And- his second
too Is, oddlj', bigger than hla big
too.
Konnal-akl-boot3*] u 3t-T)o n ^'Wt:
His iocs were black and su-ollen be-
fore onyhfxfy discovered his trouble.
A doctor had to cut away half a
too nail nd a bootmaker wns lilred
to-mBke;:h l m-n- spt c iflr : bulr o fniEf
^^BOfltifaBT efLniy fittfri ti l , , f fJJ
ahapea'feet.- — .
Reddish tried ths boots for the
first tlmo yesterday, in a friendly
tcam-race over a slnlom course, and
-won by a wide margin.
Skyline Officials
-Study New Rules
BALT LAKE CITr, Jan. ' M
Athletic and faculty icprtsentntlvei
of the Skyline conference today/Were , \viciiita
TOumnjt oTorjj proerani of alfaltu^/ oKLAnm
controls tossed at them yesten^sy
by the conference presidents.
Dr. A. Roy Olpln. president of
Ttblverolty of Utah, listed tho. rec-
cmmendntloni. approved In genera]
by the other loc^ prcaldenti last
VMlc Tbo proposed oontrDls report-
•dly-iewod-faJriy-eloite - to-tbo-Una
eet by tho Anurlcan cottncU of cdu-
— -■;eaUon. ' ' '
are_on the docket_ln_Magic
Valley high achool cycles,
Games will ace Filer at Hat-
Icy, Oakley at Hcybum. Paul
and Hansen at Klmberly, Dietrich
at Haselton, CasUeford-at
fleld at Wendell. Carey at BUsa and
Bellcvue at Dedo,
Twin Palls rates as a slight favor-
ite to defeat Qoodlng, alUiough the
teams shape up aa about even
prevlQua jfcGnls^.Both bava. defeat-
ed Oakley, although Ooodlng-won
by a larger margin.
Caldwell downed Qoodlng In
overtime period.. whlIo_Twm-Piills
won 47-<B.-TwIn-Palls_haS:(lowned
Jerome,' while Jerome beat Qood-
lng. Both lost to Buhl at Buhl.
two squads 'rata about' even
height deportment, with a
edae_soIng_to. the-Brulns;
Both have a team loaedd with let-
Twin Palls' undefeated sophomore
team^^lI-mi«~ao<Idmg'» strohi
Junior varsity Jn the preliminary
itnrting ot 1 pjn— — —
Filer trnvcIa_toJIalIcy-ln-s
thn t-couIil-M-t"^IO.te"T:on[«l
ley rales as a alight favorite, only
because of a home-floor advantage.
Oakley meets Hey burn at Hey-
bum and the homes landing Pan-
thers will be out to even (he
with the Hornets. Oakley wc
earlier gome at Oakley and should
turn the trick again.
Palrfleld plays at Wendell and win
tH 'the underdog to Coach Murray
Sa ttert le Id's— fast-developing— Tro-
jans. This contest, originally sched-
:HimzroE:iTj£tiiyriwoi.'move»i'Up~be.
cause ot the Qoodlng outlaw tour-
nament thla week-end.
Paul ploys Hansen In a~gama at
KtoibctlT and the Pout tioopracs
are backed to win, Paul, after a fast
.start, hna. slowed .doTm^but-Should
pick up momentum again against
Hansen.
' T6p~dasa B of tho evening
matches CasUeford and Eden at
Eden. ElTen will carry an undeleot-
ed_ record Into the, game., although.
Castlcford has ah opportunity to be-
come the first squad to up-end tlie
potent OrUzlles. Castlelord has be-
Skyline Puts"
Added Curbs
iJiiuAtliletics—
■SACT-tAKircrryrJimrTirm^-
Skyllne conference athleUo direc-
tors and faculty representative.^
voted In fovor ol NCAA supported
JoiiniBmentii_and_aprlng_rootboU.
pracUce, _ -- ■.
.But ot the some tlme.-the athletic
states conference schools rejected
ptrUdpaUon-ln- poa t- season *^oot-
abolishment of frcshmon competi-
tion In all varsity sports.
Th e reconi mend a tlonH_are— ad-
visory only and represent a com-
promise-between- suggestions' from
the American Council on Education
(ACE)- from the national collegiate
athletic association and from Sky-
line conferenco. presidents.
Now tho rKommcndatlons made
nt the two-day meeting- here will
go to tho conference presidents for
apprnval, -rejection ^or-amendmen t-
The conference delegates also rec-
■ «mmettded-thaf6kypne- teams; slop
D rliis j.UlpTj'asoii. They_vol^d' m
do«-n a motion that veterans .re- I
turning from military service woiild I
be Immrd latelv elliilhl B fn^ TwmH.y ■
1 a night aes- I
The delegates held a night ___
[on to discuss tho iflsa' foolbaU
inedule before adjourning..
SHORT ROUTE to the
SOUTHWEST
ndUopilByftt
•fia* diffhig j-sur call
ITRAILWAYS
F«Tln*~notei Phong SlilT
__-.iit m ut
-no iTi U7 4ns
7S»- B1S-I(T
_i(a lit)' ito
_;t8_lSa__16i_tiT-
Wffii ■i-.i~..;in IB 111 «
Tbutt — ui sii m
nitlthi* Famic.
llandliMB 49 it n
,1(0 s«ft St I ml
iiu- m ITS'
BuckEIIiotrto —
eTWodestp
MODESTO, Calll.. Jan. 20 LR—
Buck Elliott, former playing man-
ager of the Qrcat Palls, Mont, bose-
ball'ttam; win mnmific tlie~ Modesto
Iteds -tlili-oomlng-BcaBonr He-Is a
first baseman.
Directors of tho'Modesto club, of
tho California league, announced
Elliott's appointment but did not
mention his snlao'.
. Elliott.^ whq hit better -than -.300
for the last three years, hndihls best
' *cn r, BS jmuiaGcrJasLseasoa^t Graa t-
"^lU, winding up In thtd place,
and. then winning -the -Pioneer lea'-'
(tue playoff. ' .
Harry (Kid) Matthews, Seattle, left, and hla manager. Jack Hurley.
;.«hat whils pB«klnt'*t- Seal lie fer-»-*'boslness-trlpeoit.'' Becenttalirla'
flfht circin la thit MollheWi, a contender tor (he heoTywclght erown,
-may-sign to flfbt. Jersey JValeolt, taearywelgbt champion. (AP wlre-
photoi . ...
Trouble Brews
On ISC Campus
POOATELLO. Jan. 20 «1— No
one wns talking — officially—
Tuesday nlgiit on tho report In
the Idaho Stote Joumol that
football Icttermen at Idaho State
.coUego-WiU. ciult-Lhe jtchoolJf.gr Id-
Co acli Joh n Vcster doesn 't re-
elgnr^-
Tlie paper said a number of
"1" club members came to them
and said Vesser told them "some-
thing would .bo. done,':^ about- the
l /e.-Kc r said on l y tha t he would'
'follow the recommend atlon's ot
;JSC Prcaldent Dr. Carl W. Mc-
In tosh_J3r. JJcl n totluearller- was
quoted as having said that If the
studenia wish to'transfer to on-
other .•;chool, "they can go rlRht
ahcBdnnaTcslgn."
Rumors had It .Uiat a stnlc
board of cducotlon meetlni; In
BoUe ^ob.'.7 would. see sprnttlell- "
nitc action token.
No one was saying what w;
the cause of the trouble. .
Transfer for
Grid Yankees ^
Slat^ To3ay
NEW YORK, Jon. 30 W — The
formalities ot transferring the. Now
York Tfanks fooibaSl team to Dal-
las, where lliey will become the
Texas RonKcr.-i, will lake place TUcs-
■aajrin-iiiirTmiaasipiiio o«Icr"o;
Notional football league Commis-
sioner Bert Bell.
Meanwhile Qlles E. Miller, 31-
yeor-old Dallas textile man who
heads pro fnatbairs newc.ni team.
jlromicdTdotaiJii "
1 ond
few of the otticr.cliib
"le newspapermen.
In Ibe course of a lengthy press
ifprrnrr, "lllrr
L. That Jie and hU associates are
prepared to put In "ns much money
as seems ncce.timry" to make the
new club n success.
3. That no coach or Rcneral man-
ager has bccn-selectcd^Bo ■fari"'Bli'
though a Boo d many names have
"been"MenMoiicci:
-Th a t — Jimmy — Phel an , . w l i 0
coached the Yanks during the 1031
season, still Is under consideration.
.-■1. .JTiot Uio Iloniters' ploying per-
sonnel won't bp UmltffI fo , TVynTu
ondTSrVanlts' Negro ployers uVely
_wlll bo retained. .
has been made to play the Rangers'
iiome-gamos ln tlie-Cotton-bowl. b1-
.though there Is a verbal undcr-
-itnncUng. -.
Rex_Layrie Wins
SALT LAKE cmr, Jar,-30-tfl— -
Rex taj'ric, Utah heovywelgh, took
the first step In his comeback at-
tempt Monday nlRht by knodkinif out
Bob Onmer,' ISQ-pound Lexington,
Ky., NcKro heavyweight, In 53 scc-
nds ol Uie Uiird round. • Laync
relBhcd 100.
— Bob -Lemon.-who-won-17-games-
Jpr-the-JndlansrJoet aeuon. allowed
the most wis. ::U,'and tho most
JUn.iItJlP.JLl) Ihf Jtmarican-JeaBuai-
IS KUCKm''
Plau-by.Plau With . . .
■JOECLEMENTS
Magic VaUey'8
QBSt!fied~SiiiftBcaste£l
WSC Almost
Lost Players
To Hawlieyes
SPOKANE, Jan. 30 tfl— Alton
Klrcher, Wo-ihlngton State's noa
■h"i*a(l~TS)tIjan~c(iac1i. Baia~it'"'*-o:
thou8hl-foi>-nwlille— but-not-nny-
more— that some Cougar gridders
might follow Forest Evashevskl to
Iowa. ^ .
"BeforT I decldcd to stay
Pullmah' therc was some thought
that several of the boys might no
to Iowa. But now I don't bcUcv.
we'll loss any," lie told the SpoknnL
Sportswrltcrs association. He didn't
name names:
Klrcher had been scheduled to
go to Iowa as Evoshcvskl's assistant
but- decided to' ntav hcrc.lnstead-os.
Ills successor. Evnshovakl resigned
take r
hend coach os WSC —
llve-ycnr contract at Jown.
or— hod—littlo— eU»-to— flay
about WSO football but ho drifted
Into haakctball to add another Icall-
monlal to Johnny O'Brien's growing
"He's Uie BTcaltst pioyer I've cvci
Been." he uvid of the five-foot, nine-
Inch Sea ttle- university^ star. " "I've
refcreed two Seattle games this
year and he's the best. I'd Just like
to set In the sLinds and watch him.'
_KI relic r_Wflj...nj] — aU^lbno^ oop-
great himself nt MlehlRnn State and
wa.i the Spnrlnns' head bosketball
coftch-for a-yrar, "
Dietrich Cagers
DefeatBIiss in — -
42-33 Prep Game ,
DIETRICH, Jan. 20 — Dietrich
turned the tnblcs on Bii.is here Mon-
da> _ niMbt t o ilpfrnt. ■
^a^tirin milsii "school -bTiSl-eioair
game.
conch Bob Jones' Blue Devils Iced
tho contest In the second quarter.
■Dlctrtcn-led-ir^nilo end oflfie"
lirsl qunncr. but shot Into a 20-10
advantUBC at the half.
Ailctt led Dietrich with Ifi points
and Lower Was high for Bliss with
13.. .
Bliss won an earlier game between
■tho-miuftds-Rt-BllssrTtilnonic.'ir
Ji-na_pQstponed.Jrom-Jaa.-l s-w h er
storms forced the gnme to be re-
scheduled.
A preliminary saw Dietrich girls
defeat the Bllu girls .41-28. Pcteh-
-"'•^rTJistHcH wiur"r5~p5iHur
It (t nl
Walcott Releases llrade Aga
Ruling to Make Defense or
BOCHESTER, N. Y., Jan.,29J-T5-Jer8ey Joe Walcott broke -out-T?iij,
Monday ^ffuinflt-the' "fight-or-elBe'' ultimatuin'pf-the Now York boxinB
"Ever since I won tho title I've put in on the line every dny with the v. «
f I wouldn't care if Bob *■ * * * ^"-loithoi,
In 'Get Tx)ugh' Poll
try.
Chrlsteftbcrry takcB it awoy
ffofinne"lodflyrHe-cim't-take-
away my aatlsfaction."
~TInr~ heavyweight champion has
been ordered, by ■ Chrlstenberry,
chairman of the New York boxing
commission, to sign for & defense
of ths crown by Feb._6_or be strlp-
ped of li
-What I've been doing Is more
Important- thnn nati.ifylng— boxlnr
com mill loners," said -Walcott In an
interview. "IVo tried to Impress on
klSs sineerity-and-falth-tn Ood.
I've, been eveiywhcre— In prisons,
In army camps. In hospitals.
"If I'm not a credit to boxing,
then he can have my title.
"I aslted for an extension when
I n-on It. I wanted a full year. I
Jieod money, an d I h aven't made (15
since I beat EsKord Charles. But f
made a promls^, I promlBcd_pod.If.
iw fit to moke roo a champion
.■ork .with kids.
Hnvfl~si)rT:lBs-D nny~o w n";
from o family ot ten children.
I know the temptations kids havo
'hi be 30 Thursday. I need
money. If I'm willing to sacrifice
my time lor the youth of this coun-
— men In political posi-
tion hurt me?
T want to fight* again. I lovi
flRhtlnR. I'm no fake. I'm no phoney.
What I_do I_do from my heart"
Walcott wos KerB for the Roches-
r pres.-!- radio 'polio fund ^'dinner.
During the course of a busy day hi
took pnrt in ceremonies opening 1
new gymnasium at the Baden street
uttlomsnU
Dun FJario, Wolcott's trainer,
snld Itie champion' could not pos-
.sible Cojt In March. Walcott weighs
V agaln.nt a fighting weight of
. Since he unexpectedly bent
Charles In Pittsburgh nearly six
months nRo, ho has done only road-
ro rk In-between his .numcroua.frcD.
public appearances.
Walcott said It would take -.
IciLst twovmontlia" to get In shape
"do a" — ' — ' — '—
"I-
the V
chiq, will confer In Miami Feb.
witii JIm.Horrl3,..Brcsldcnt of the
Intematlonal-Boxlng' club.- over a"
possible opponent for tho broad-
shouldered Negro who Is the oldest
mon ever to win the hcavyfli-clght
■diamploashlp;;—- — - ■- r7 ^ -~
Magic Valley's
CageSchedule,
nooJIns il Twin Fi
KN«r .L lUIIrr
Oaklrr nt lltrbuca
CIITDAT
III at CalUwtll
-*-Y&|^iOjsn«tGm ttNTuci:rBOURBDN whiskey.- ■
Al^.CiENI AOE mStlUlNG CO.. FttANKFORr. KV,
PATERS0K.-N..J..-Jan.-29 (flV-Thft »a,
sociation aavc Bob Chriatenberry, chairman mt
atatujithlctic commisBion, a pat on tho liack r^
with Jersey Joe Walcott and once again naltcd'
join the NBA
Champs Qash
InTopMatch
fifJlatEvLent_
A battle of champions will hhth-
llght-Tff ednesdays "weekly "wrestling
program at Badlo Rondevoo with
arndqEaoy^^LBicmo— oofltt- Ugh t Clirislcnbeny-i
heavyweight, mccUng Bob Cum<
mings, Intermountaln Junior heavy-
"■.'eight champ.
It will be a non-tlUo affair, since
Cununlngs Is out of Boy's weight
limitations, but the match promises
to,', have all the cormarks of
championship bout.
. Cummlngs defeated Billy Melby
here last week In a title match, while
Roy downed Cal Boberta In another
bout"
Ctunmlngs Is -a strong, clever vet-
-an of the ring. Boy Is equally
strong and Is fast on his feet.
The seml-flnal pairs newcomer
Ray-Wllaon- wlth-rough-and -tumble
Jack Carter In a two out of three
falls- or 4S-minuto bout. Carter Is
returning to the ring after being
hDspItallicd for a head Injury re-
ceived In a bout four weeks ago In
Boise. ■
Benny Trudell, who wrestled here
before as the Oalloplng Ghost, meets
Fletcher in the ao-mlnute
opener.
Action will start - at 8:30 p. .... .
■Ma tchea-nro—prescn t ed-und er— the- -|
sponsorship of tha Twin falls
VPW. - ■ ■
Bengals Shellack
Rocky Mountain
In 72-49Con|est_
POCA'TEtXo, Jan. M Ltl— A' taller,
more experle'nced Idaho Stote col-
lege team Monday-night smothered
Rocky Mountain college 73-iD In a
non-conference basketball game.
The. Bllllnas, Mont, leam kept
even with the Bengals during the
first qua rter but fa ded s oon after.
"Coaai Steve Belkocleoredtiis Idaho
Etate bench In the final period.
IDAHO STATE TI, BOCICT UOUNTAIK II
Roelij Utn. It 11 pf t<I<>l>o S<?1*
In a Btitem^ni
sued in conjun^"'
PrcsidenrDiTfl
Executive S«ret»
MiUer, New York
■to-joiirft-figiiit;
common.. evil(-aB
mote favorable ti
Wolcott to nrw b]
defense of hij ciot,
"best odt'Mee In aa
move to coon"
the boxlnj (
country." Hie jj^JT
' ^ ns the dtsduju t,
"New Yort'i tSsM
along witliapolicj33
plons to deltnd !1<4
six-month periodic,,
for a united Ireol h
tlon.''-Uie"ili[S«
"UIsmuie,olBc
champion to a
empting othcntiui
more flagnnt la t^
two agencies Kttbf^
for proper title (to:
tho overiapploi
of champlDm vctU
of confuilon."
Orecne pointed ed
has hesitated ta cd
or- else dictum oel; L
no desire to btrbfa
dual rhnmplnfuM^ .
Per SMiiij!
You don'l have to drive your old c
Kwn'r— when you coroo in and drivojUio fc»^
'Statc«nut)~tnd get
won't match anywhcro— on tho most
' —tho new Nash Statcsnun Airilytc
Come in. Sec how we can give yoU
hundreds of dollnn less than any °^-TZ^^\
ivirh il. HMr ntir wnnHcrTiiI offer. Lrf Ul V^TZ.
with jl. Hear our wonderful offer. Let w
wc make it for you to own a new Nain Si
W ILLS MOTOR
236 SHOSHONE ST. WEST
TIin!!S->rE!WS,,.rWIN FALLS, IDAHO
Mai^ke^s an^Finance
Stocks_
•MAnKETSrA'M^JliANeE
IocmX tiBTlU. IkaldkUtm.
WbH<— m I Dport ud MOE
Corn— Irni aporta.
rrulkina la tmn4 k point on 0>m, itock
Darins' UU~ti>dlnr.m*nr Vtiet blc1i«4
«wB7 fr^m thtlr hlih vaLatji of th* dir
but »dT»nc« •Ull EwJomlnmUd.^ ^
. MMlon kul Uw niau for Ui* dur *UL1
na anKHx] I.7M/I00 ahariL
RiUnxd itacki l*a t
- r Tr»41o« (*nanllr wi* tiutiani and
"a^dm Ih* lantw r*ln*n wm Illlnola
Cfiitral, Bou^rrn PpKls, jnulbtm.-Ball-
w.r. 'ra«lll«- Ut^Tnat (whkh
nmrl abHd mata ihan fouriwlnir - ---
Unit). Z*nIUi lUdla and FoaUr 1
which bmd K 100 par etot al«k <1
Liv-estock
■alabta-mrtmniiar-IxWr'aMDad T«r«iV
M Inar than KoDiUr: ' chein IM44a. lb.
butchan 1I.0OJI1 uadlasi ILIO-TS: Mowt
htUtn lT.OMR.Mt aarlii
en con or bulk] ■IdcI
>low| laU' Monday falrli
nitrelal ta teat
U .I(.OMl.«;
odd eooimarelal
rt not MUbllahtd
im J»d fndan
. u'jiond ..
lb, tnitlud Ih U
lOM I calv.
I
PnrlRii <!ar — 1
—Wm}rua'—^1ta.l"~'Jl^ ' lOM
UatiUi aio_„llll,T HI,! 11,0 BB.IL
—J ! i y i-J'-'i^J i Si ^ JiJ 'Si'!
- Twin FaUs
Livestock Prices
' lb* rallowliit Twin PbIU Uratock
prtoM m pTorlded by U» Twin
PtUi Llveatoclj: Co mmlMion com- ,
■ ^ ^ ninyrlmwrnirOTaTmnorar- thBTiiC '
^weeklyjUUiUon-ula.' . — ^
»ZIJX)-t31.00
EeUen „
l3J»-t33£0
Cumen ud cutt«n__llS.OO-t30J)0
Lamba y""^ top
■ EWM top
Boss ' 118.00 top
-Air-Battles-Flare-
Ane^OverEDim
I to c
. . 3 over North Korea
today and damaecd one In a bilcf
bauic
—It— was —the — lira t - claln i ~tir~' t hff
-tt-VAIxr
' wbea the Sabrejeto that (!own->'10
— ^-inOa^probaUy-dMtHiyed - another
and damaBcd three.
His SabroJcU, Oyiag thniuBh
ideating.- aUca. . threw_.22-of_ their
-planes against the CO enemy Jetj.
Whil a t he ridea over North Korea
_ eIe*re<l'aliBhtly,.-iiettvy_mtn drtnch-
'ed the batUefront to the south, hold-
. Ins action to the lowest ebb in a
week. OK Korea's western and east-
era. oo<t<.~U...S. and British war-
. .ahlp threw tons of shells into enemy
jwwIHnriit TifiTi .atfip rin y BTI fl titfTit
Bssatilta to cut Bupply Unes to the
Jront.
BHOenOH^ Jan. 'a9—SSt Nor-
man . Maiulca .ConUlD. ' Shoohoss,
' v^r released front. actlrs dntjr la
toe avine corps Wedoeadij at
Camp - Pendleton. CaUf; me' ser-
. geanL > niservlst, was recalled to
actlvB duty as • private tint class
Jan. 3^ IWI.'-aad serml as on am- 1
„|iMiioua tractor <>pc>rator In Soru.
eoT lb. fad brt(m
lUlItT and low com.
>: tinnan and nu
, — laUMa ITSi auadri
. _„„ cholt* vnlm ll,00.M.O0i
imlil-and-low goca aUaihtn eatvH
ai.D0-3:.10i ftw (ood Ilsbt alnckirn U.aat
load ibort jrtrallnn ai.00. . ' ~ .
IIa» •(UbI* M0| aboul ilaadrt ahotea
110.110 111. trneklnt IS.OO-TIi law ls.«i
njo'r«taul"r2™a 'islo-'lIffrO.'^
Hh«p Mlabl* nana; Uu Mcndir ttt
Moml and eholiw HI lb,' wuolfd limba 11.00.
-Grain
it iih*ti "at traJa vdar, a
>1K hltbar,
a m Is IS
Opta MIxb ' Idw Ctoai
Sbaap aatibla tXeO: na- alaBchUr Iimtu
aoHl blddlni waak to M lowtr; I«*a'olintr
'- ■- ---- r»«a KDod 100 lb, fad
eo-1.0fl lower lhaii
t II.IOi alauthlar awn U.VI
■ KAWSAB ctrr
u nrun* oUerj
-1t A »a A 3- t;in . JIH. IM. lUP I — l l oo
.000) liUO lawtri ebaica ttO^M Ibt.
T.IS-TS.
Caltl* (,0001 caTrM tDO| lUoihtar itwi
■nd h.Ifm ■iHilr 16 It \owr- --
.vCL.an . ■ 1 coi I. hUtLfhok*
lnn-H.1B.31.M riop— - ■'
Nabraiks ~tad-£ill(n
fihWp t.OOO) alauit
fair iwid ta prima naUn tm
waak la >bo(U]i H lawar 1
Fellowship Meets
EDEN. Jan. 39— The WestmlnLitcE
Fello^-ahlp taim.Erten and Haiellon
presented the services Sunday morn-
ing at both Eden and HozelCon
Presbyterian churches tn obervance
of young people^ ^^7.-^^ __
JiinB^Schauemtimn, presTdenCwas
-astlstfld-by-pwyia _Wcst and.Cpl.
- - -- , Tom -M cOlure. -both pajit-pwAlftVnf^ ,
lUXlP' laa "TacH[n~Miirtln, Robert Smith
•lt'_,f»!t_J.TI._
Onion
trmdliiK.
liowi ;.79jroo: firw ;
Potato and^nion
Futures
FEDRUAIir ONIONB
KAncn ONIONB
UAHcir TunKrvs
Tami
> hlih. .4m low. .(> ctoa;
:ta*«l 1.0 cant hliliar to 1.0 nnl ta<
: «»rJ«).6IJ;.Julx..lfll.
OeU^«l.;n: D*;: iStf.OU i.Marf h IS7.ID
Ctrtlfkakd wiul^ipoL-iAUNV
Twin Falls Mai-kets
^ — avrarocK —
OwtM tmtctini, 1(0^10 Iba
""-TO diilira q<»l*4)
l>m. a0O4M Ibi. -
Sow., h -
Ormt Norlbtrn No. 1 1
Graat Nultbtra Na. I __
Ptnte* Na, 1 _
PlDto* No. 3 -
K«^Na. I
iTWD daiilei qiutadj
Xad alarar. cltanN?- 1 arida ,
AKalfai elaaiTft;^ iridi
- (Twa daalm qudiad)
POTATOta
, (Moit. dMlaia_mit-af ^oukat-pand
tinil jaclilOB on niw ctilinc prloti.)
(Odi dnlat qsstad)- '
ECO POOL-
Tba followlBr prieaa' war* aapnlltd I
Iba Idaho EcT Trodgcara o[ T»1b FaJIa ft
pool No. I (iuu U-ID, Incluilitli
Larea D _
-- Kiium 8
nil A
iFour da^ia.Quolad).
Taft Race in
Initial Voting
Still M ystery
WASHINOION, Jan. 3S HI
stUI -wos a mystery todor ' whether
Sen.-Robert-A.-T«(t-wlU-talce-tho-
hlgh stakes (nunble of entering the
New Hampshire Republican presi-
dential, prclcrcnce prtmary against
acn. D;i'lgt)t D. Elsenhower.
Talt backers In Concord. N.
imnouncod plans last nleht to en-
ter his nama today In the state's
March 11 balloting, the nation's Itrst
"popularity contest"- for OOP can -
dldntej.*
OIllcUls SllrpriBed
But orilclals at 'mft's national
oampalRn headquartcra here ap-'
peared lurprlsed at the Concord an-
nouncement They had understood
-the-CTilaTcnBtgr-Htn t w on^ elilhlng-
tliD DdvlsablIlty*or rlaUns a direct
test ot voter appeal with Eisenhower
In a elate where top OOP leaders
have been plumping for the gcn-
er'oL
m' other political deevlopments:
1. Harold E. Staasfn's backem
lald^bo detlnltoly-would enter the
New Itampahlro OOP" contest rais-
ing the prospect of a three-way race.
Btassen aJtserted -in a speech at De-
catur, 111., last nisht that the for-
eign poIlcies-oMjoth TafranaTreifl-
dent Truman point toward "prob-
able war,"
Kefanver to Enter
3. Ecn. Eslca Kcfauvcr. D, Tcnn,
was expected to quality for the New
Hampshire Democratic primary bO'
fore tomorrows mine deadline. "
3. Sen. Harry P. Byrd, D.. Va..
predicted that Ur. Truman will bo
» cnwd ldam it the e hlcl eittullvo
'tHIfiEThe can win. ''ButTH he runs
again, - li • -will -be 'defea ted ,"- Byrd
told newsmen.
Hopn tor AnnoiinecmcDt
4. Democratic National Chairman
Frank E. McIClnney said ha "hopes"
to gel Mr. Truman to say whether
he will run by Marcli 20, date of the
Jackson -JcIIcrtoB day dinner here.
" £«ni-Ctln(on-P>— Andersonj ~
N. M., stepped down aa chairman
ot the Democratic senatorial com'
patgn committee on his doctor's ad-
vice. He will continue as vice chair-
. Sen. Earle C. Clctnenls, D.
Ky.. tormcr vice chaimianr""wa3
;d up to replace Andcnion...;
7 of 1 Family
~^Di^ in Crash
KHJOMAIJ. Kans., Jan. 20 (IB—
Seven mcmbcrii of one faiiilly._ln-
cludlriB' tivo children, were killed
near here yesterday when their
automobile hurtled over a bridge
Into a creek.
The only survivor, a is-year-old
girl, clltnbcd through a broken win-
dow ot the .submerged cor and came,
to the aurtnco of the atrenm,- She
>Urn— hnd —blo w n— out-,* nd.-
caused Ulc driver to loso control of
the vchlflo.
- ^i B a L ie iiN i W.IIB e igmrrwi
at_the point where the accident oc-
curted. 13 miles east ot here on
highway 54. It was Rcvcral hours
before all the bodies were recovered.
The dead, all from WlchItn,.Ktin3.,
MoMri. Co nh I e -Mae-Anderson,- 10,-
and her daughter Carol Lynn, .d
months; Mrs. Ida May Thomas_and
her tour" children," Unda, 13, Carol,
\ LclOnd. 2, and Lonnlc. B months.
Mrs. Anderson was a daughter of
Mrs, Thomas, The survivor, Betty
_ThomBs,_lj,jnis_[inothcr_dflughtcr^
She received minor Injuries and was
brought to a hospital here. ■
Cars Collide
pja. antunla y ■■gtien- tn i ar T tnn agr
narrowly mlucd colliding headon
seven and one -half miles southeast
■ot- J erome-on- hi Bhwnyl>3:
Walter Biggs. Nampai driving
east, turned out to pass another
cor when he .saw John Jamlsoni
Jerome, coming towards him. Biggs
turned -baclc -1 nhrTila owu'Una— dr
traffic but not soon enough. The
4,wo-veblol M-t iruck-catii— otheir-a-
glanclng blow.
Mbney-to- toan :
• Farm Loans
•' City Resident Loanf
• City Buslneaa Bldg. Loans
• No Appraisal Fee
•. No -Commissions
• Low Interest Bates
J. Ea WHITE
Twin Falls Radio Schedules
KLIX
HUB KILOCTCLE8) '
'ABC liniS ilBtmoBDnUli
nZBUAt
TIKI ma Dliik KuaaB
■ lU miun Lvwit, Jr.
Mil* •TliwB MnttnE
wednesdat;
StOO Call ta Prarar -
■ iM llollr'i PdUIh
■ lU LloH Jainn. tin.
ISM Iiai."niurW«brrJrw«
Tns-*«.illn ACioiukr
IiM •Ueb Garrad. Nam
lha DaBk
tUnt tha llamlnrwa
lOilO •m Tm Storr
moo •Jack n<icb Bbaw
■llilf-"LDin jBOniar— ■ ■■■
II tM •Ataltiil thracoim
Hi« "PauA Um«»
ItiOO DlDDir Dill Roundap
ilU -Jorci Jordan. U.
tM Kill Klub Show
IiOO •Uitli Tiall
.7 M .•UnUnr- .ThaaUtL
7 130 IMatila
ilOO ma llardr Famll,
■ :I0 iDt, Klldilia
Otis Fulion Lwla. jr.
loioo fhiTcip Our
KVMV
(lUO EltOOXCLES)
KTFI AM-FM
*i«a *rKpla Ara rnnnr
(:M 'Hr. and Hra. Noi^,
T;00 aula Wltb Lold
TM •PBI»Qlt .
S^OO 'Tba Una Un _ ,
Silo Coodinr ■» T. r.
lOiOI BurllEbl Mdodlca
- - •Otant llolfoinb
•Yott. tba World
•Danca Oruaaua
UlU K*w» „
iraDNEflDAT-
'!lS 'CBS Nrwaof Ai
l:(t •IIoaanarT
IrtO -Wandir Wariaa
SIB •Tognr Dr- Jlalona
l!0b KVWV Noon EdIlloB
iJilS NawibraU. MatlnU
lIiU Tttrr JdiMB
IIIS 'Llnklatur
It4I Umlo all Laa
4110 TumblawMd Ttmpet
JlOOl»IWi^^
•Edward B. Uurrow'
S.-OO CoU Qaa anb .
llU ail'Flruan EdlU
< iM-iKoltrwrne-Ttaa
7:00 iDob Ubp*
0 lUirtfan IthdModr'
WEDNESOAT -
llOO Zno'ItaDi
IKS Ualte VbHt ActL
Illf Itrtakfaal EdltloB
lOilE TIekar Tapa 'Hm*
1:11 Klloerela KUaihaka
tiOO iWalnma TiBTalaira
(ito iNawa of tha Woria
f.ii III. V. Kallanbarn
tits Bli-Flflt*n CdlUoB
illO itEalli of Itj .
7:00 iCroucho Mars .
7:10 lUIc Btorr
ll:DO iDuTT CtaUt
S:U iMcradlUi Wlltxin
0:00 lOoa ItBQ-a Famllr
>1IS NIoa-FltUtn EdlttSB
Senator Ired by i
MacAr thur V iew
In Primary Vote
WASHINOTON. Jon. 20 «l
'Se uaHi r Tobe y. i t.. N. '-Hzr'todur
labeled remarlcB by oen. Douglas
UadArthur caUlng for experienced
dvU leadership a "letthanded" slap
at Gen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower, but
said they "won't keep See from
being elected PresldcnL"
Senator Brewster, R., Me., Inter-
preted MacAsthur'a remarks aa a
strons-JndlcatIo n -ot~hls- support -of-
Senator "Taft, Ohio,, for the Re-
publican presidential nomination.
Toboy " lirba"ciang-El8cnhDwer"~f o~r
tha GOP nomination. Brewster Is a
Toft supporter,
~TIioyrcommentcd"In .Bepiimte IS
tervlows-on MacArthur'a- statement .
yesterday that In selecting « nation-
al leader the voters face a demand
tor a man with demons trated^pa-
bHltyUi""lho science o! clviv gov-
ernment." . .
MacArthur made the statement In
a letter to New Hampshire sup-
porters asking that his name be
withdrawn- from -the -state's' March
U prcsldenUal primary, tho first In
the nation this year.
Trade Name Filed
^Certificate of trade name and
articles ot co- partnership for The
Wh( to — HousBfT-a 10 — Me In - ove nii g-
south, were tiled with the county
recorder Monday --by — Thurm
. 'emon Jnckson and A,
Jackson, all Tirin Palls...-
Tlie establishment Includes a beer
parlor, cigar store, lunch counter
and card room.
The city auditorium In thls'^en-
tral Florida me Iro polls was com-
,. pletcly tilled, every -noolt of atand-
i»-|-lng'<>pa ee -was— pi«ltsd-*nd— m any-
i.-ere turned away. The audltarlifjj]| ^
1 A, B. Tait
MXaONS TO MEET
FILER, Jan. 20— Tha annual past
master tjanquet and meellng will
bo held Tuesday evening at the
Filer Masonic hall.
Twin Falls Annual
Machmery^ Sal e
To be held at the
WILLIAMS TRACTOR CO.
Twin Falls
THURSDAY, MARCH
Keep this Sola In mind. Bring your Mochinery
in from now, on. , Watch for future notices..'
LUNCH BY TAMN FALLS GRANGE
Darnoll and Chancy, Clorks
ti. Oscqr and Harold Klabs, Auctioneers -"
WisiB-
BOSTON, Jan. 20 Ifl — Atty.
"Wllllnm r. A. Orahnm looked up
quickly In Suffolk superior court
when ho heard his wife's name
^llcd loT Jury duty .
A HurflS 8lanco~nnEoTury
box -and -Graham— told— Judge
Daniel T, O.'Connell:
"It Is only fair to Inform the
court that the lady Just called Is
my wife. Even a la^^yer knows
better than argue with his wife,"
Mrs. Ifntherlne R. Graham
was excused Imme diately and her
nubbfti&nt'ent-nheaa'wiiir'Uie
trial ot an automobile accident
Senatoi-Raps--
Korean~War
ORLANDO, Pla.. Jan. 20 Ifl— Sen.
Robert A, Talt last nlitht called^ the
Korean war VUaclcas'." *alid' -'a war"
undertaken by mistake."
The Ohio Republican candidate
for_..thD__prcsIdcntl(il _ nomination,
made that statement on tho Korean
conlllct In an extended criticism of
tlie administration's foreign policy.
Most of his speech v.'as along this
line.
Tait received boomlrtg ovations,
probably theJoudcsLln.hla. one-day.
whirlwind speaklnR tour of Florida.
Tnit snid "we could have won the
(Korean) war six months .ago If
the_admliUJtratlon -had-wanted to
wln'It?' ,
_ BrEAKEBl
FILER, ' Jan. 20 — Roy Babbe],
TK-ln Falls, was speaker at the LOS
sacrament meeting Sunday.
V-8 Motor Is
Reportedfor
1952DeSoto
Bpeclflcatlons and details of i
now IM-horscpower V-B type englni
are announced-by-tbe-DoSoto-dl,
vision of tho Chrysler corporation.
The new tnglne.wlll.appear ifithin
a few wceksL- . .
Called the "lire dome," tho new
powerplont Is clai m ed to have more
Horsepower per cublo Inch than any
other competltlvo American auto-
mobUe'cnglne. . _^
Namajjf thB_ engine _comes from
iiic dome -like -c^ombusilon chamber
which DeSoto engineers say Is the
"Ideal design."
. The englpa has a compression
ratio of 7.1 to one, low piston spfeds,
- short, rigid cylinder ■ block and
r-^iisiiSf^' .Baa
sherrt.c .
A water-heated carburetor throt-
tle body almost eliminates the pos-
sibility of icing and Improves the
"hot-idle" characteristics of the en-
gine. -
. Conventional three-speed trans-
mission Is atondard equipment with
the new cnslne. Avonablfi'aa'speclal
equipment are the tip-toe shift with
fluid drive.
Poem Published
William Z. Iron, Jr„ son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Iron, Twin Falls,
has had a poem- published - In the
National Anthology of Poetry.
Iron Is head of the English' dej
partmenl ot .the Heedsport, Ore.,
high school. Be has been teaching
Ensllsh there for the Inst two years,
llc.la a grnduntc _dI the T x^-ln Falls
lilBh BchooPand- Qntleld colleae,
-McMInnvlUe. Ore....
Classified
_WAN-T-AD.RA-T-ES-
(Daiad on Caal-p«T<«t>nl)
— SuDd
""l 'adMrtUlt
adtl
-Blind Ada" ara attlctlj eoBlldtnllal
■nd BO infonsatloB can b* (Iras la
raiard ta tba adnrtlur.
Einn lb 00 Id b* rapsTtad^tmsiadlil*-
mora Ibtp oBa iaaarrael lowrtloB.
lail-J. VI Una Cla-na
ClIAniS FOUNDATIONS. aU trp<a-ln'
DANUl: onbaaua ■•■llabk an7 1
DiuilEUna, riiaaa OUi-nt. Wrila
DaVtli. Itoau 1. Twia Falla.
TO ,. CONTACT Alroholltt.
rtiona No. 0, wHta P. O. Oca It, Twl
alli, or altand wHklr nHtlsra
Wnlnndar at 1:30 p. bl at ir
A*a<iua Nortb. .
U I.A1>I X
-HELP WANi
GRADUAL Kill
OFFICt JUID B
Twm puuq
Ul
Warn
VULLOiruiBI
klAUIIIIU> n-_ .
Year rfinit M. HL_
fcr rUht min. llibnil
Orvin» KMtittlWj
PAGE TEK
TIMES-NI!WS. TWIN FALLS. IDAHa
Lost Sheep's
Retui-iitoAid
In Polio l^'un<f
_ irnm rugm Ont)
— Uie Irelum'-tfip Ito. tliB. pla^ed^oaHI
St 4 j>. m.
Ingjau-dlUlouJI
■now all but covered the backs at
■tttrrlns animals. They tnnde only
AOO yardi Uig first day, ntopplntt
near mldrtlnlit at another elump of
■wlllci»-s. TIio two men lert the
horaea nt I p. m. and relumed to
CBrcy^Mqnrtny._they., rcDcnlcil' tlic
proce-M, maklns another 300 yards
"and leavlnirthc nnlmala bTTinotner
clump ol wlllowa. They hope to
have the anlmnla out to the plowed
rond by Tucadny niBlit.
It wns on the second day's drlvo
that the men discovered the nlarv'
Inir.'hair frozen sheep bcneilth thi
ledge. When the plan to ncll the
anUnnI In the March of Dimes drive
van conceived, Cenamina volun-
teered to lly tt bale of hny to the
animal. lie took off Tuesday morn-
Inn aa Leonard Konord left on nkls
-with a lobostcan to rescue the sheep.
Hownrd will return the animal to
_Carcy.whcre it will ho cored for an d.
ftittened for eventual sale to the
hlRhrit blJdcr In this unique drive
for funds for the March of Dimes.
Proposals to End
^Long Rail Dispute
Rejecied by Union
WABHINaTON, Jan. 30 It^Tht
Brotherhood of Loco m oliv e Flr wnen
"ana tnalo'emch^hoa - rejected an
-wnentcncy board's recommendations
— for-oe t II I n FM> - 1 wo-y e ar-d Inpu lo- wlUi-
"-"tlio, nation's rtvllroads.
A union statement said It had ex-
pected the board to "try to ram
down t he employes '^ throaM the de-
itrucUvo propasaIs"Df the ratlroadif
and the unwnrrantcd pollclc.i of the
admlnlntrullon— and that is' exactly
what It did."
The brotherhood had refused to
participate In the boord'a henrlnRs.
charslnic that board members were
blaaed In favor of tlio carriers.
.The_un Ion, .with B0,ooo to 15,000.
members, la prohibited by law from
...conductlns^a atrlko -for- at- least „aa.
days. A..strlke oven after that time
Is doubtful, since the carrlern are
under Rovemment seliuro and any
'walkout could be halted by court In-
- Junotlon. — ■ . *
AuctionLHeld^
At Cai'ey for
Dimes March
CAHEV, Jan. 20— An auction and
dance Bnturday night brousht an
additional $420 JIS for the Carey
llnrcli.of-Dlmes.campalBn.
llcftdtiiR the list aa hlRh money
milker . was Uie 05-pound lamb
donated by Joo Cenarrusa. The
lamb brought |43 In two aales. A
wcaner pig, given by Floyd Rudolph,
and another pig welRhIng SO pounds,
donated by Oall Park, were sold for
154.15. . _ . - .-
" All "business— hbiisca ' In Carey
donated -prliea— to- be-auctloned.
Items aluo were given by varloui In-
dividual;. Cafes aAd cIubi prepared
sandwiches and drinks for sale.
—Other-Items auctioned -Included
a quilt, cakes; carvlntc set, loncy
d olls, botes of chocola tes, a slatf
of bncon, clilckens. motor oil and"
anll-Ireeie. Auctioneers were Elmer
Dennett and Merwyn Esterholt.
Walters who served were Leonard
-IIoword.-Jlod-CoatM-and'Eitothol t.
Eugetiics Report
Bieing Prepared
BOIBE; Jan. 30 <U.i>)— The stat«
eugenics board will make a formal
report of Its activities to Gov. Len
Jordan later this week. Dr. £. P,
Peterson, Boise, chairman, aald to-
The board held a one*day meeting
yesterday and . reviewed recom-
mendations from various state Insti-
tutions. _ . — -
Dr. Peterson said the board'* func-
tfon— aa prescribed by law— was "to
nrevent nm ductlon.ol- chlldren-who
In tho Juturo would become nodal
menaces or become wa^cls of tho
•late."
He said stato ' Institutions were
"required to report to us fobr times
K year aU people- under their Jurln-
dlctlon Who they recommend lor
sterlUEatlon." The board . tlicn re-
views these recommendations.
Blocked
MOUNTAIN HOME, Jan. M W
■Durgtars entered tho Mountain
Home branch of, tho First Secur-
ity-pnnkrlnK-niim f i D r ih p i t ee-
ond time In seven months, but
failed to pierce the. new rcln^
J o r cad concrete vautt, !^ agents'
tinld'today.
hadpounded the vault walls with
a sledge hanuner without success.
About Hven month* a so.
thleve.1 who burrowed their way
into the vaults escaped with t3.>
300 In cosh and have not been
apprehended.
Entcnnco last night was ap-
parently, gained through' a sky-
light.
National Tax _
Protest Move
"Stai'ted Here
homi^town? " Th e _JocaI _ chamber
Tho descriptive letter ends with
"Wo In Twin Falls and the Magic
Valley, who are sick of tho waste of
our tax money would appreciate
knowing If you feci as, we do and
are willing TO Join this effort. Per-
mission la granted to use our plan
a* you see fit."
The letter for Individual um saysi
TTiftVe'today paid my federal in-
come tax under strong moral pro-
test. While I fully subKrtbe lo thi
payment of taxes for es.-ientlal gov-
ernment purposes, I deeply resent
tne~tjse of my tajc money for the
wasteful and extravagant purposes
Inherent In the present bureaucratic
plan and «o glaringly disclosed re-
cently In the various government
scandals."
That Is the text of printed let-
ters, which wlUi envelopes, will be
avolhible to taxpayers In abgut 10
days at the Chamber of Commerce
office. Separate letters to Uila state's
senators and this district's congress-
men will be available.
Howard Molfnt. chamber s
tarr-managcr.-- said the organlxa-
tlon's committee on national aflalra
also plans to have letters printed to'
accompany Income tax returns.
Sorting of Beans
Started at Milner
..■MURTAUaiI.-:Janr21)-5Bcaa"Kjrt:
Ing Blurted last week at the Dean
Orowcro warchou.ne In Milner.
— ^A-run -ol-lram-liireo to-lour -wee ks
'■ : pec ted. E. A. .lUcnboId. man-
said. The length of the run
win be determined by the quality of
hrnn.i. Hnmi. hrnni
Shocking
POCATELLO, Jan. 30 lUV—ThlS
Is the thocUng story about ' a
cap-gun packln' cowboy, who Is
" ' «nenlhft- '
Bnbby^Enumgarlner- was rid-
ing his "bronc" around hlsTpom-
' kitchen- when -he noticed ft -
■ ;_£lectrlc_stove He.
er and Jammed 11. Into the hole,
which happened .to be a 330-voIt
electrical outlet.
Fortunately for Dobby, his
mother was In the. kitchen when
the sparks started to fly. She
kicked Dobby's gun from his
hand. Bobby wasn't injured but
,tho. Buh'4 barrel - was . m ci ted - o ff ..
right down to the cylindc>.
Church Youths in
Hagerman Active
HAOERMAN, Jan. 3&— PJvo young
people and their teacher, Mrs. W. A.
Hendrlknon, from the ReorsaniKCd
LDS church, visited services and
Sunday school at the MeUiodlsl
church Eundny. The doss Is taking
a course ol, study In dUIerent
dcnomlnatlota. —
The Methodist Youth Fellowphlp
Is obncri'liiB youth week by having
special services, On Wednci>day the
Rev. Hnrry Starbuck will npenk to
the -youth -on the "Mcanlng"of the
Call to United Christian Youth
Action." Young people will have
■cKimcc-to-Tnnswcr-thD-cnll-inr
dedication 'scrvlCD'at'tlie Methodist
church Feb. fl.
As a part o( thch- commitment.
the._i'outh_nnd_lhclr_ leaders— win
give II each for a program of united
action outside of their home town.
The money will support such Uilngs
aa^a-na tlonnl-weekly:radlo' program"
and thdl strengthening of Christian
youU^ork around the world.
Leave on Mission
CAKIXir, Jan. aS— Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel B. Crane, members of thO'
Oakley LDS church, led Sunday for
Salt lAke City to enter the LDS
been ruslilenta .of the Oaklty area
for manv yean, wlll.be statlooed In :
Calltomla tor two years.
The
Cotton Suit
You're invited to conxe into the Mayfaif Shop at vnim
earliest convcnienco for a view, of tho latest, the finp,t
ond smartest fashions we've been able to offer in tnanv
_BCaaon._Tliey.!re.gay.as-the.sprinff.sen3on itself- and iu^t
as colorful. Shown here arc but a sugRestion of th
. many new things on display . , , and every day now
somethintr stiH new is. added, bo do-come -in -now anfl
"' shop at yoiir leisure. "